Every Man For Himself: Shortlisted for the Booker Prize, 1996

Every Man For Himself: Shortlisted for the Booker Prize, 1996

by Beryl Bainbridge (Author)

Synopsis

For the four fraught, mysterious days of her doomed maiden voyage in 1912, the Titanic sails towards New York, glittering with luxury, freighted with millionaires and hopefuls. In her labyrinthine passageways are played out the last, secret hours of a small group of passengers, their fate sealed in prose of startling, sublime beauty, as Beryl Bainbridge's haunting masterpiece moves inexorably to its known and terrible end.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 224
Edition: New Ed
Publisher: Abacus
Published: 05 Sep 2002

ISBN 10: 0349108706
ISBN 13: 9780349108704
Book Overview: * *'Brilliant ... do not miss this novel' * DAILY TELEGRAPH * *'A moving, microcosmic portrait of an era's bitter end' THE TIMES
Prizes: Winner of The Commonwealth Writer's Prize Best Book Eurasia 1997 and Whitbread Book Awards: Novel Category 1996. Shortlisted for Booker Prize for Fiction 1996.

Media Reviews
A narrative both sparkling and deep... the cost of raising [the Titanic] is prohibitive; Bainbridge does the next best thing * Hilary Mantel *
Beryl Bainbridge's masterly vision of the Titanic's voyage, Every Man for Himself, which won the Whitbread and was a finalist for the Booker Prize in 1996....Bainbridge's ability to distill, and almost disguise, major ideas in brisk and seamless prose allows her to tell the story of the Titanic in fewer than two hundred pages * New Yorker *
The novel swiftly takes us back to the beginning of the Titanic's first and last trans-Atlantic cruise, so immersing us in the rarefied world of the first-class passengers -- their mix of uncommon sensitivity and appalling snobbishness -- that we come to know them very well... the real story is the impending, irrevocable fate that awaits so many of the passengers...It is difficult to imagine a more engrossing account of the famous shipwreck than this one * New York Times *
Extraordinary... a wholly new and highly individual work of art... beautifully written * Independent *
Bainbridge's masterpiece * Evening Standard *
Marvellous... exquisite pacing... stunning descriptions * Independent on Sunday *
A meticulously observed account that almost offhandedly convinces the reader that this is exactly what it must have been like aboard the doomed line...In a few deft strokes Bainbridge shows the gulf between the steerage passengers and the nobs while communicating the alternating servility and resentment of the crew. The book is nearly over before disaster strikes, but once again, the unnerving details seem just right: the careless self-confidence at the beginning, the gallantry quickly eroding to panic. Bainbridge's swift, economical novels tell us more about an era and the ways in which its people inhabit it than volumes of social history * Publishers Weekly *
Extraordinary... a wholly new and highly individual work of art... beautifully written * INDEPENDENT *
Marvellous... exquisite pacing... stunning descriptions * INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY *
A narrative both sparkling and deep... the cost of raising [the Titanic] is prohibitive; Bainbridge does the next best thing * SUNDAY TIMES *
Bainbridge's masterpiece * EVENING STANDARD *
Author Bio
Beryl Bainbridge wrote seventeen novels, two travel books and five plays for stage and television, she was shortlisted for the Booker Prize five times, and won literary awards including the Whitbread Prize and the Author of the Year Award at the British Book Awards. She died in July 2010.