Críticas:
This gripping account of a woman under threat in rural Carolina is the finest novel to date from the author of COLD MOUNTAIN * The Sunday Times * The book . . . matches Frazier's style: all stripped-down dialogue and an acoustic approach to narrative. This is a land where not much happens, where characters communicate only when necessary. The book's slow pace is entirely fitting for the vast, empty land in which it is set. That is its glory * The Times, Book Club * Frazier is very good at the slow and nuanced process by which emotionally thwarted, and justifiably suspicious, characters come together, meeting always against a backdrop of violence and upheaval * Guardian * a beautiful tale of suspense . . . there is a classic film noir feel to it . . . Frank and Dolores are fascinatingly real . . . The dialogue is witty and the depiction of the Appalachians so sumptuous that I minded not one jot that the denouement, in trying to be understated, almost vanished from the page . . . * The Times, Book Club * A beautifully written tale and an atmospheric thriller - the perfect story to curl up with on a cold winter's night. * Good Book Guide * The writing is so beautiful it almost takes your breath away. NIGHTWOODS is every bit as good as Frazier's first book, the bestselling COLD MOUNTAIN. Everything about it rings true, from the very first line to the gripping finale. * Herald Sun * Wonderfully atmospheric, as twisty as a country road * The Times * Extraordinary * Independent on Sunday * There's an almost rarefied atmosphere to this novel . . . mostly the breathless delight comes from Frazier's poetic sensibility towards the brutality and beauty of nature. My advice on NIGHTWOODS is to soak up the purity of Frazier's prose before Hollywood gets a look in. * Sunday Telegraph * It's Walden by way of Cormac McCarthy, a bleak southern Gothic landscape that Frazier describes in a stark language of elision * Financial Times * Lyrical . . . written in understated, poetic prose. * Herald * The sense of drama slowly engulfs the reader like a mountain fog moving down a valley. It has heaps of atmosphere and texture. * www.thebookbag.co.uk * Its dazzling sentences are so meticulously constructed that you find yourself rereading them, trying to unpack their magic . . . By the book's climactic scenes in the shadowy mountain forest that gives NIGHTWOODS its title, the unhurried, poetic suspense is both difficult to bear and impossible to shake. * Entertainment Weekly * Frazier's taut prose, superb sense of place and timing and suspense-inducing skills save this from being just another thriller. * Daily Mail * [Frazier's] great strength, as well as presenting us with a fully realized physical backdrop, is the tenderness with which he renders the relationships at the core of this book, creating a compelling meditation on violence and the possibility that human love can heal even the deepest wound. * Publishers Weekly * Charles Frazier's third novel is as accomplished as his first two . . . In anyone else's hands, this might turn out to be a gripping but ultimately forgettable thriller. Frazier, however, is a writer whose spare prose paradoxically oozes atmosphere - you can almost smell the verdant pine trees and hear the crack of the twigs underfoot . . . Beneath the chilling, photogenic story, the writing remains beautiful. * Independent * His best book to date . . . Frazier's exquisitely efficient style is matched by some finely tuned suspense . . . And the climactic pursuit through the darkened forest of the book's title proves to be gripping without ever descending into gothic melodrama. * The Sunday Times *
Reseña del editor:
The main lesson Luce had learned was that you couldn't count on anybody. In the lonesome beauty of the forest, across the far shore of the mountain lake from town, Luce acts as caretaker to an empty, decaying Lodge, a relic of holidaymakers a century before. Her days are long and peaceful, her nights filled with Nashville radio and yellow lights shimmering on the black water. A solitary life, and the perfect escape. Until the stranger children come. Bringing fire. And murder. And love.
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