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The Lighthouse [Paperback]

Alison Moore
3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (109 customer reviews)
RRP: £8.99
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Book Description

15 Aug 2012
Shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize 2012

The Lighthouse begins on a North Sea ferry, on whose blustery outer deck stands Futh, a middle-aged, recently separated man heading to Germany for a restorative walking holiday.

Spending his first night in Hellhaus at a small, family-run hotel, he finds the landlady hospitable but is troubled by an encounter with an inexplicably hostile barman.

In the morning, Futh puts the episode behind him and sets out on his week-long circular walk along the Rhine. As he travels, he contemplates his childhood; a complicated friendship with the son of a lonely neighbour; his parents’ broken marriage and his own. But the story he keeps coming back to, the person and the event affecting all others, is his mother and her abandonment of him as a boy, which left him with a void to fill, a substitute to find.

He recalls his first trip to Germany with his newly single father. He is mindful of something he neglected to do there, an omission which threatens to have devastating repercussions for him this time around.

At the end of the week, Futh, sunburnt and blistered, comes to the end of his circular walk, returning to what he sees as the sanctuary of the Hellhaus hotel, unaware of the events which have been unfolding there in his absence.

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Product details

  • Paperback: 192 pages
  • Publisher: Salt Publishing (15 Aug 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1907773177
  • ISBN-13: 978-1907773174
  • Product Dimensions: 12.9 x 1.3 x 19.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (109 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 3,927 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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Review

A haunting and accomplished novel. (Katy Guest The Independent on Sunday )

It is this accumulation of the quotidian, in prose as tight as Magnus Mills’s, which lends Moore’s book its standout nature, and brings the novel to its ambiguous, thrilling end. (Philip Womack The Telegraph )

No surprise that this quietly startling novel won column inches when it landed on the Man Booker Prize longlist. After all, it’s a slender debut released by a tiny independent publisher. Don’t mistake The Lighthouse for an underdog, though. For starters, it’s far too assured … Though sparely told, the novel’s simple-seeming narrative has the density of far longer work. People and places are intricately evoked with a forensic feel for mood. It’s title becomes a recurring motif, from the Morse code torch flashes of Futh’s boyhood to the lighthouse-shaped silver perfume case that he carries in his pocket, history filling the void left by its missing vial of scent. Warnings are emitted, too – by Futh’s anxious aunt and an intense man he meets on the ferry. It all stokes a sense of ominousness that makes the denouement not a bit less shocking. (Hephzibah Anderson The Daily Mail )

The writing is sublime. Spare, sometimes straightforward and sometimes quite opaque. But regardless of the overall transparency, the immediate images of the room or the street or the clifftop are crystal clear, conjured from very few but very well chosen words. The people, too, feel real. They have complex emotions and don't always do logical or sensible things, but they always convince. As they move around one another in still, empty spaces they create a dramatic tension that the reader can almost touch. We wish their lives could be better. (Amazon.com )

This is powerful writing likely to shine in your memory for a long time. (Emily Cleaver LITRO Magazine )

Evocative and beautifully written in a spare and simple prose, this is a haunting, sombre and somewhat unsettling story that pulls you in quietly, yet powerfully; I downloaded this onto my Kindle early this morning and read it from the beginning to the rather surprising end in one sitting. We know it is on the longlist for the Booker Prize; it deserves to make it onto the shortlist and I, for one, very much hope it does. (Amazon.co.uk )

The Lighthouse is a stunning book. Read it. Then read it again. (Zoe King Amazon.co.uk )

Alison Moore's writing is exquisite, the prose simple and powerful, but it's the use of imagery which really marks it out as something special. (Sue Magee The Bookbag )

In The Lighthouse Alison Moore has created an unsettling, seemingly becalmed but oddly sensual, and entirely excellent novel. (Alan Bowden Words of Mercury )

Alison Moore's debut novel has all the assurance of a veteran, a strong contender for the prize, its sense of despair will either be its making or its undoing: 9/10. (Roz Davison Don't Read That Read This )

Ultimately,what drew me into this bleak tale of sorrow and abandonment was the quality of the writing – so taut and economical it even looked different on the page somehow – and so effective in creating a mounting sense of menace and unease. It never flinches. (Isabel Costello On the literary sofa )

This is an incredibly powerful, sad story. A beautiful, if austere book. And an amazingly talented writer. If it is a first novel, I guess it will not be the last because this is the kind of writing that is here to stay… (Josephine Huys Amazon.co.uk )

Moore’s writing has a superb sense of the weight of memory. (Kate Saunders The Times )

The Lighthouse is a spare, slim novel that explores grief and loss, the patterns in the way we are hurt and hurt others, and the childlike helplessness we feel as we suffer rejection and abandonment. It explores the central question about leaving and being left: even when it feels inevitable, why does it hurt so much, and why is this particular kind of numbness so repellent to others? The brutal ending continues to shock after several re-readings. (Jenn Ashworth The Guardian )

The Lighthouse looks simple but isn't, refusing to unscramble what seems a bleak moral about the hazards of reproduction, in the widest sense. Small wonder that it stood up to the crash-testing of a prize jury's reading and rereading. One of the year's 12 best novels? I can believe it. (Anthony Cummins The Observer )

The writing in The Lighthouse is spare and deceptively simple – there is in fact nothing simple about it – it is the kind of pared down writing that hides a multitude of complexities and leaves behind it an array of images and in this case scents. Upon closing this terribly bittersweet novel, the reader is assaulted by the memory of violets, camphor and cigarette smoke. There are several returning images and motifs in the novel, such as lighthouses, bathrooms, scents and abandonment which are beautifully explored. (Heavenali.wordpress.com )

This is a book that might have vanished had it not been picked up by the Booker judges. It deserves to be read, and reread. No laughs, no levity, just a beautiful, sad, overripe tale that lingers in the mind. (Isabel Berwick Financial Times )

What must have gone some way to earning The Lighthouse a place on the longlist, though, is the admirable simplicity of Moore’s prose. Like Futh, its without flourishes, yet beneath its outward straightforwardness lies a hauntingly complex exploration of the recurring patterns that life inevitably follows, often as a consequence of one’s past. (Francesca Angelini The Sunday Times )

The Lighthouse, Alison Moore’s melancholic debut, would eventually have found admiring readers through the great network of word of mouth. That it has been shortlisted, deservedly, for the Man Booker Prize will quicken the process. This is a beautiful short novel sustained by muted urgency, nuance and the exactness with which Moore conveys the paralysing levels of depression that Futh battles. In order to deal with the present he attempts to make sense of his past, which refuses to fade away. His thoughts throb with humiliating episodes from his boyhood, cut short when his bored, dissatisfied mother left, leaving his father to voice his anger at his only audience, the bewildered boy. (Eileen Battersby The Irish Times )

A debut novel from a high-achieving independent publisher, The Lighthouse has surprised some observers with its place on the Man Booker Prize shortlist. Disquieting, deceptive, crafted with a sly and measured expertise, Alison Moore's story could certainly deliver a masterclass in slow-burn storytelling to those splashier literary celebs who take more pains over a pyrotechnic paragraph than a watertight plot. (Boyd Tonkin The Independent )

The originality, structure and neat prose of this first novel justify its shortlisting, but it doesn't do much to lift the soul. (Kate Green Country Life )

I am almost reluctant to share anything about Alison Moore’s The Lighthouse at this stage, because I don’t want to spoil it in any way for others. The Lighthouse is a short novel of only 182 pages, but is – dare I say it – perfectly formed. This is a tense, suspenseful work, the plot ticking like a time bomb. (Megan Dunn The Listener New Zealand )

"The Lighthouse," Alison Moore's debut novel, is sufficiently strange to win. The third-person narrator is distanced from, but never judges, the weird protagonist Futh, a middle-aged, not particularly attractive, recently separated man going on a walking tour in Germany. He is visiting some places he went to with his newly single father, after his mother abandoned them when he was 12. The people he meets along the way are even less prepossessing than he, but the narrator's tone of voice somehow contrives to make the reader continue to turn the pages. (Paul Levy Wall Street Journal )

A man who is newly-separated from his wife but middle-aged, embarks on a walking trip in Germany. At one of the B n B’s that he is staying at the landlady is also contemplating her life and marriage. You could be so easily fooled into thinking that this book is mundane and just captures the hum-drum of their every-day lives, but the author, without writing what happens, is telling you really what is going on! You also have to make up your mind as to what outcomes there are at the end. I can’t tell you how brilliantly stunning this book is and I think it’s a credit to Booker that this has come from a small publishing company, yet packs one hell of a punch. (RBKC Libraries blog )

The menacing atmosphere Moore builds up is masterful, in that Futh only partly perceives it, through his own preoccupations. A pair of silky knickers he finds under his bed only makes him think squeamishly that the dust on them is ‘strangers’ dead skin’. Rarely is dullness so dangerous. (Laura Marsh Literary Review )

Review

Melancholy and haunting. The sense of loneliness and discomfort and rejection is compelling, the low key prose carefully handled. It’s a serious novel with a distinctive and unsettling atmosphere. (Margaret Drabble )

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
86 of 95 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Violet scented loneliness 15 Aug 2012
By MisterHobgoblin TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Kindle Edition
The Lighthouse is an unusual and terribly sad novel. It is also rather good.

The novel tells two stories in interleaved chapters. The odd numbered chapters tell the story of a man called Futh who is going on a walking holiday in Germany, somewhat half-heartedly. The even numbered chapters tell the story of Ester, a guest house landlady.

Futh is lonely; he is middle aged, separated from his wife Angela and seems to lack any real support network, either in the form of friends or family. He has a back story, but very little present story. He is simply adrift, waiting to see which way the tide sends him, his only anchor is a silver lighthouse in his pocket. The opening chapter, set on the deck of a car ferry plying the Harwich to Hook of Holland route tells us that this is unlikely to be a story of ostentatious wealth and splendour.

Meanwhile, Ester, the landlady of the first and last hotel on Futh's planned walking route also has a small lighthouse. Moreover, her guesthouse is called the Hellehaus - a literal but incorrect translation of "light house" in German. She, too, is lonely and bobbing in the tide, not going anywhere but quietly leading the life of Molly Bloom. This use of repeated imagery is a real trademark in the novel. Whether it is lighthouses, violets, bathrooms or a host of other images, they keep cropping up over and over again. At first this feels uncomfortable but by the end of the short novel, it is a source of immense power. Moreover, the story keeps returning to the same few incidents, each time offering just a little bit more information or a slightly different perspective. It builds into something very simple but very evocative

The overall impression is deeply melancholy. We have a sense of lonely people, sometimes living in company, sometimes clinging to fond memories with sentimentality whilst their lives slowly decompose. Youthful hope becomes middle aged routine becomes old age anaesthetic.

The writing is sublime. Spare, sometimes straightforward and sometimes quite opaque. But regardless of the overall transparency, the immediate images of the room or the street or the clifftop are crystal clear, conjured from very few but very well chosen words. The people, too, feel real. They have complex emotions and don't always do logical or sensible things, but they always convince. As they move around one another in still, empty spaces they create a dramatic tension that the reader can almost touch. We wish their lives could be better.

And there is a better life to be had. Futh's childhood nemesis Kenny demonstrates that with enough charisma, it is possible to turn even modest opportunities into apparent success.

It's difficult to say more without spoiling the finely crafted sequencing; without dampening the powder. Suffice to say that it captured the 2012 Booker prize jury's collective imagination. Hopefully it will progress through to the shortlist.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Accessible view of a depressing reality 23 Jan 2013
Format:Paperback
Putting it bluntly, this book is about the inadequate, lonely and miserable lives lived by people who have suffered inadequate parenting. Critics who give it the bird because they do not like the characters are missing the point: the holes in people's lives create people with inconsistent moral values and unexamined lives. On the whole, many of such people are neither admirable nor easy to get along with. Neither are they likely to be grotesquely bad enough to become super-villains; this is reality.

I was surprised to see such a limited vocabulary on offer. From the perspective of a language school, however, this offers an unusual strength: a short modern novel which can be read by students with relatively low levels of English but adult sensibilities.

I have stuck to a four-star rating because while I think that this is an excellent novel, I just do not see it as offering enough in terms of plot, scenery or characterisation to really be seen as a top read. It was never going to win the Booker, but I certainly do not see any serious objections to its shortlisting. It makes an honest attempt to introduce a serious idea in a novel way.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful Book 23 Feb 2013
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
This is a truly wonderful novel by Alison Moore - her debut, in fact, and she has set a fine standard. The story is of a sad little man, Futh, who failed to evoke any kind of empathy or sympathy in this reader at least. Futh, who is so insignificant that he lacks a first name, is a middle-aged failure who emulates his father (as a one-dimensional bore working in the field of chemistry) and clearly misses his mother, who walked out when he was a child - she never returned, Futh Senior destroyed all traces of her, and Futh Junior had no further contact with her. Having failed to establish any relationships or friendships as an adult (or indeed as a child), Futh Junior then meets a woman who reminds him of his mother (same name - Angela - and a secret smoker, like his mum), but the marriage doesn't last. Futh is so pathetic and incapable of action that his wife has to pack boxes full of his possessions when he then moves out. He goes on a walking holiday in Germany, complete with anorak (of course) and his precious ornamental lighthouse (his mother's), and the tale is of his travels during his tour, and its inexorable progression towards disaster. Alison Moore uses quite sparse prose - a little reminiscent of Colm Toibin at times - and brilliantly brings to life a series of rather unpleasant characters. A real joy to read, and one you can probably despatch in a single reading. Magnificent!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
3.0 out of 5 stars Quite boring
I didn't find the story very engaging and I didn't have any empathy for any of the characters. Not a great read
Published 6 days ago by christine gray
1.0 out of 5 stars Dull , dull , dull
I'm amazed at the number of positive reviews on here as I found this story bland + uninteresting . The writer seemed to revel in the mundanity of her characters but I just found it... Read more
Published 9 days ago by Lies Inc.
2.0 out of 5 stars well written but full of nasty people.
This book was an easy read by dint of its accomplished writing style. The story and characters , however, left me cold. It is a bleak portrayal of human nature with no redemption.
Published 14 days ago by Siobhan Henry
3.0 out of 5 stars No what I expected
I thought this book was a combination of a travel log and a study of the traveller's relationship with his father. The story is nothing like it. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Y H Leow
4.0 out of 5 stars Curious little novel about peripheral people
The Lighthouse is a curious, original short novel. It begins as a neat seeming little story about a man reflecting on the events of his life whilst on a walking holiday in Germany,... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Sirin
2.0 out of 5 stars Not my kind of book
Without denigrating the authors efforts I did not enjoy this book and I would not would not recommend it.

solmagwind
Published 1 month ago by Mr. J. Docherty
5.0 out of 5 stars The Lighthouse - illuminating and dark!
Explores male and female relationships from many aspects. The effect of a child whose mother abandons the family, left with an alcoholic and violent father, the son's unexpressed... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Ms A Thompson
3.0 out of 5 stars Opinion of "The Lighthouse"
I had a taster on my Kindle and was keen to read the novel. I thought it was very well-wrtitten but i found the ending to be most disappointing. Perhaps I missed the point. Read more
Published 1 month ago by MRS SHEILA PENDRICK
4.0 out of 5 stars Strange
Wasnt keen on the ending seemed a bit rushed and im not sure how to feel now it has ended, did futh get his lighthouse back?
Published 2 months ago by Clo
1.0 out of 5 stars A very unrewarding read
I cannot imagine how this book came to be shortlisted for the Booker prize. It has nothing going for it.
Published 2 months ago by Miss Edie C. Reilly
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