Immagine dell'autore.

Tobias Hill (1970–2023)

Autore di The Love of Stones

11 opere 898 membri 38 recensioni 1 preferito

Sull'Autore

Tobias Hill was born on March 30, 1970 in London, England. He is an award-winning British poet, essayist, writer of short stories and novelist. Hill was educated at Hampstead School and Sussex University before spending two years teaching in Japan. Hill's early work appeared in magazines such as mostra altro Envoi and The Frogmore Papers and published four collections,Year of the Dog, Midnight in the City of Clocks, (influenced by his experience of life in Japan) Zoo and Nocturne in Chrome & Sunset Yellow. In 1999, Hill published his debut novel, Underground. The Love of Stones (2001), Hill's second novel, earned wider recognition. Hill's third novel, The Cryptographer, was published in 2003. Tobias Hill's fourth novel, The Hidden, was published in January 2009. He made the Ondaatje Prize 2015 shortlist with his title, What Was Promised. (Bowker Author Biography) mostra meno

Opere di Tobias Hill

The Love of Stones (2001) 291 copie
The Cryptographer (2003) 198 copie
The Hidden (2009) 178 copie
Underground (1999) 126 copie
What Was Promised (2014) 45 copie
Skin (1997) 22 copie
Zoo (1998) 5 copie
Year of the Dog (2008) 3 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Nome legale
Hill, Tobias Fleet
Data di nascita
1970-03-30
Data di morte
2023-08-26
Sesso
male
Nazionalità
UK
Luogo di nascita
Kentish Town, London, England, UK
Causa della morte
glioblastoma
Luogo di residenza
England
Japan
Istruzione
Hampstead Comprehensive School, Cricklewood
University of Sussex (Bx | English)
Attività lavorative
poet
novelist
essayist
teacher
Premi e riconoscimenti
Eric Gregory Award (1995)

Utenti

Recensioni

This book started off so promising, with 'notes' being taken by the main character, Ben, about Sparta and Ancient Greece interspersing with what he was experiencing. And it was truly a good story until it got to the last few pages. That ending was super disappointing, and I felt like the "thriller" element to all this was very contrived and forced. The author could have done something really good, something totally different, but this ending was just...not it.
 
Segnalato
viiemzee | 22 altre recensioni | Feb 20, 2023 |
Following the relationships between families that live in tenements on Columbia Road in Bethnal Green, the story starts in 1948 amid the bomb sites left behind after the Second World War. The outlooks for the families are contrasted, with some content to earn enough to keep their families together, while others are more ambitious. Their backgrounds are also very varied, including refugees from Nazi Europe, recent immigrants from the Commonwealth and locals of many years standing. Hill’s writing captures their struggles to provide and to attain their aims, but at differing costs to the families. Then a life-changing event leads to a jump forward to 1968 and an exploration of how this event affected the families. Hill explores in a moving and sympathetic novel, the price that people may pay for pursuing their dreams while ignoring their family and friends.… (altro)
 
Segnalato
camharlow2 | Jan 14, 2022 |
Pointless piece of prose that classifies itself as a thriller. It is just a soporific piece of fiction that promises more than it delivers.
No thrilling aspect at all. Pieces of futuristic technology mix oddly with bits of retro, which doesn't help the credibility. The plot is infantile. The love story is so flimsy, it is laughable, and Anna is such a boring person. I think she is well-suited to her job as tax inspector.

The only saving grace of this book is its decent writing. Pity for failed storyline and weak plot.… (altro)
 
Segnalato
moukayedr | 5 altre recensioni | Sep 5, 2021 |
Perhaps some of my comments I made as I was reading this book will best show what I thought of it as I was reading it -

"Wow, now here's an unlikeable protagonist." The main character is not a very likable kind of guy. He's just gone through a messy divorce and he's a bit gloomy. As we find out in the story, everyone else is fairly similar to Ben in the sense that they are, as a group, very unlikeable. No one really likes Ben and we find that no one has ever really liked Ben. Then again, these people that do not like Ben aren't really likable themselves.

I should probably mention the plot at this point - Oxford scholar goes off to Athens to find himself and escape his ex-wife and he ends up on an archaeological dig with a few people that really don't like him and who seem to have something to hide.

"This book is rather strange. And the main character is a bit. . .disturbing. Just reading it I feel drugged in some way, it has a heavy, distorted feel to it." There is a bit of a dreamy quality to this work. The author manages to keep things hidden and it was this aspect of the book that I liked.

"I think the only reason I keep reading this is to find out what's hidden." Then again, with so many unlikeable people that I finally thought to myself - I hope they kill each other off at the end, the only reason I made it to the end was because there really is a mystery here. Something is hidden. Is it literal? Figurative? Ever going to come to light?

The writing is very good, but there are no heroes here.

… (altro)
 
Segnalato
Chica3000 | 22 altre recensioni | Dec 11, 2020 |

Liste

Premi e riconoscimenti

Potrebbero anche piacerti

Statistiche

Opere
11
Utenti
898
Popolarità
#28,532
Voto
3.2
Recensioni
38
ISBN
80
Lingue
7
Preferito da
1

Grafici & Tabelle