Review
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What Belongs to You stands naturally alongside the great works of compromised sexual obsession such as Thomas
Mann's Death in Venice . . . we are dealing with a writer who deserves his plaudits . . . I found myself unable to stop
reading . . . Headily accomplished . . . an essential work of our time (Daily Telegraph *****)
Worthy of its comparisons to James Baldwin and Alan Hollinghurst as well as Virginia Woolf and W G Sebald . . .
spellbinding . . . a novel of rejection and disgust, displacement and transcendence . . . I found myself trembling as I
read it (Evening Standard)
A refreshingly slim, subdued and contemplative piece of work . . . Greenwell writes in long, consummately nuanced
sentences, strung with ins and soaked in melancholy . . . What Belongs to You is an uncommonly sensitive,
intelligent and poignant novel (Sunday Times)
I had thought of Hollinghurst as I read What Belongs to You, Greenwell's astonishingly assured debut novel, but
questioned whether the parallel came to mind because both writers create vivid, enclosed worlds filled with ambiguous
and shifting relationships between gay men. In fact, though, the greater similarity lies in their ability to blend a
lyrical prose - the prose of longing, missed connections, grasped pleasures - with an almost uncanny depth of
observation . . . [The] middle section [is] a masterful study in alienation and escape . . . Like the writers he
admires, WG Sebald, Thomas Bernhard and Javier Marías, he is drawn to the idea of a body of work that seems as though it
is all one book, or, as with Sebald in particular, a territory in which the reader wanders. It is perhaps too soon to
say precisely what Greenwell's own fictional territory will look like - but even this early on, the landscape looks too
riveting to miss (Alex Clark Guardian)
A rich, important debut, an instant classic to be savored by all lovers of serious fiction because of, not despite, its
subject: a gay man's endeavor to hom his own heart (Aaron Hamburger New York Times Book Review)
Brilliantly self-aware . . . Greenwell's novel impresses for many reasons, not least of which is how perfectly it
fulfills its intentions. But it gains a different power from its uneasy atmosphere of psychic instability, of confession
and penitence, of difficult forces acknowledged but barely mastered and beyond the conscious control of even this gifted
novelist (James Wood New Yorker)
With What Belongs to You American literature is richer by one masterpiece. The character Mitko is unforgettable, as all
myths are. He reigns at the heart of this book, surrounded by the magic flames of desire (Edmund White, author of A
Boy's Own Story)
A powerful novel from a writer who seems destined to produce fine work in the years ahead, describing both the condition
of loneliness and the insistent cravings of the with precision and sensitivity. [Greenwell] never seeks to
manipulate our emotions, but creates a narrative voice so enigmatic that one feels both affection and disdain for him
simultaneously. Too often in fiction it becomes clear how an author wants the reader to feel, but Greenwell's character
is too complex a creation for any easy judgments. And that is what will make both him and this novel particularly
memorable (John Boyne Irish Times)
In his spare, haunting novel, Garth Greenwell takes a well-known narrative and finds new meaning in it. What Belongs to
You is a searching and compassionate meditation on the slipperiness of desire, the impossibility of salvation, and the
forces of shame, guilt, and yearning that often accompany love, rendered in language as beautiful and vivid as poetry
(Hanya Yanagihara, author of A Little Life)
There's a particular joy in reading Garth Greenwell, in having that feeling, precious and rare: here is the real thing
(Claire Messud, author of The Woman Upstairs)
Book Description
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'A rich, important debut, an instant classic to be savored by all lovers of serious fiction' New York Times