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The Northern Clemency [Hardcover]

Philip Hensher
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (58 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 736 pages
  • Publisher: Fourth Estate; First American Edition edition (1 April 2008)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0007174799
  • ISBN-13: 978-0007174799
  • Product Dimensions: 23.4 x 16 x 6.2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (58 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 259,803 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Philip Hensher
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Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

An ambitious novelist who attempts something on as broad canvas as Philip Hensher does here is a rarity – add to that a fastidious attention to period (i.e. 1970s) detail, and – most daunting of all – a large panoply of points of view, shared among several protagonists. But in The Northern Clemency, Hensher accomplishes all of that – and more – with both precision and panache.

Essentially, this is an (upmarket) family saga, detailing the lives of a pair of families who live on opposite sides of a street in Sheffield in the 1970s, bringing to life a host of characters whose problems – and ultimate destines – both disturb and move the reader. Philip Hensher couches all of this in prose that performs a fascinating balancing act: it is as descriptive and nuanced as one might wish, but it is also extremely refined -- in the sense that there is nary a wasted word; everything here absolutely justifies its place, and Hensher suggests to the careful reader that he has lavished the most forensic of attention on the craft of his novel.

Perhaps the perfect audience for The Northern Clemency is the modern reader who has lamented that contemporary fiction lacks the heft and reach of the great novelists of the past. Such a reader will find that a taste for the substantial is more than fulfilled by Hensher’s highly accomplished saga. --Barry Forshaw

Review

'Hensher is an anatomist of familial tensions and marshals his large cast of characters deftly. He has an impeccable eye for nuances of character and setting, and the details of Seventies food and décor are lovingly done: the mushroom vol-au-vents, the white wall units with brown smoked glass…an engaging and hugely impressive novel.' The Times

'The Northern Clemency - vast, compendious, wearing its ambition like an outsize boutonniere - makes a virtue of its exactness, its recapitulative zeal, its absolute determination to jam everything in and sit unshiftably on the lid.' Independent on Sunday

'Hensher has a forensic eye for detail, providing nightmarish glimpses of the everyday…engrossing, amusing and moving.' Independent

'An epic novel.' Guardian

'Hensher is fascinating good on how social transformation manifests itself in the textures, colours and manners of a culture…extremely funny, but also deeply humane.' The Sunday Times.

A remarkable novel…Hensher's technique of shifting continually from voice to voice, the third-person narrative perceived from the viewpoint of each character in turn, gives a cumulative effect of luminous richness, like a perfect piece of orchestration…but there is something more than brilliant cleverness that makes this novel extraordinary.' Sunday Times

'Hensher's is a bold, impressively sustained attempt to mark a transitional phase in modern Englishness as seen largely from the domestic sphere.' TLS

'A beautifully written book…as impressive in its scope as in the effortless artistry of the language. Its characters are well–defined and plausible, while the narrative is leavened with deftly observed humour that gently pokes its lower–middle class protagonists in the ribs.' Scotland on Sunday

The Northern Clemency is an immense novel which sweeps through 20 epochal years, showing us that a country can move rapidly into the future but that some individuals often remain shackled to the events of the past. In The Northern Clemency, an early contender for novel of the year, Philip Hensher looks in detail at a small group of people over a generation, and in doing so presents the great drama and inexhaustible wonder of ordinary life. Spectator

'The Northern Clemency is a terrific novel - a truly fine achievement.' Cressida Connolly, New Statesman

'As with most families, it's the small private moment that fascinate.' The London Paper

'Essential for anyone who wants to be ahead of the game by literary awards season.' Elle

‘His saga of rather ordinary Sheffield families from the 1970s is strangely compelling. His characters are wonderfully drawn. There's an almost Proustian care in detailing (the curious dynamics of a party; the particular atmosphere of a municipal swimming pool). I loved it.’ Charlotte Higgins, Guardian online

The "state-of-the-nation" novel has made a return in recent years. This is the most interesting and accomplished of them that I've come across, precisely because it doesn't do the usual state-of-the-nation things. Hensher immaculately provides texture and atmosphere.' The Tablet

‘An epic novel that spans 1974-1996. It's a laudable undertaking and Hensher is very good at describing a suburban 1970s childhood and adolescence.' Metro, Fiction of the Week

'An ambitious portrait of life in the north over three turbulent decades.’ Observer ‘Picks for 2008’

'Expansive yet precise, it leads the reader from the minutiae of family life to broad public events with the surest of hands.’ Guardian ‘Picks for 2008’

'Has the bones of a great British novel but, in practice, it is something more delicate – a miniature made up of many moving parts, like an intricate piece of clockwork…What the book does very well is to capture individual scenes and a feeling of its time and place.' The Sunday Business Post

'Hensher has clearly been broadly influenced by Alan Hollinghurst's Man–Booker-winning The Line of Beauty but has written something distinctly his own. Combining his intelligence with a less expected humanity and storytelling drive, The Northern Clemency powerfully slices and preserves 20 years of British life and deserves to be remembered for at least that length of time.' Esquire

'In a pin–sharp portrait of Sheffield this reviewer knows well, Hensher charts the shifting fortunes of the Glovers and the Sellers as they negotiate the seismically changing decades of the late 20th century.' Daily Mail

'The big question: is this novel worth, at a minute a page, 12 hours of our time? I think it is.' Scotsman

Praise for ‘The Mulberry Empire’:

'It's when he turns his pen to the more minute matters of the body and heart that Hensher changes from a merely clever writer into a moving one.' Ned Denny, Daily Mail

‘Hensher is a publisher's dream. At last, he seems to have returned to the fictional territory of his earliest novel, trusting less to research than to his sharp wit, keen eye and love of London.' Patrick Gale, Independent

‘Hensher is gifted with a great virtuosity and a relentless intelligence.' Ian Sansom, Guardian

Praise for ‘The Fit’:

'A comedy of manners crammed with cleverness, warmth and genuinely funny jokes…Hensher is incapable of writing a dull sentence.' Daily Telegraph

'One of the funniest, most touching, most unexpected novels I've read for a long time.' Guardian

'In the best comic novel tradition, “The Fit” is also serious and touching…and like many of the best things in life it fell from a clear sky, and is all the more intriguing for that.' The Times

'A sharp novel, full of deft dialogue, ridiculous moments and enjoyable sallies.' Literary Review

'Playful, perceptive, and guaranteed to keep the reader's mind on its toes.' The Telegraph

'Genuinely beautiful.' The Spectator


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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful
By Wynne Kelly TOP 1000 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
The Northern Clemency takes an ambitious sweep across the decades from the 1970s focussing mainly on two families in Sheffield. At the beginning of the book the Sellers family is newly arrived from London. Bernie works for the Electricity Board while Alice is very much the housewife. Fifteen year old Sandra is a precocious, ill-mannered teenager while her younger brother Francis is quiet and introspective (based on Hensher?) The Glovers are a pretty dysfunctional bunch. Malcolm works for a building society while Katherine stays at home - until she decides to get a part-time job in a newly opened local florists. Their oldest son Daniel is a handsome, sulky boy who spends his free time seducing girls. Jane is comparatively normal while young Timothy is a sad and troubled boy with an obsession with snakes (and a later obsession with Sandra and Marxism).

I was soon sucked into the story and the book became quite hard to put down. The writing is particularly good in the way that the social history of the time - clothes, food, entertainment - is portrayed. He documents council house sales, mobile phones, gastropubs and the changing nature of canapés. Less effective for me were Hensher's characters - only Daniel came really alive, the others were much more two dimensional. And radical Timothy was the least believable character in the book. Some characters were introduced but then dropped so we never met them again (like Andrew hospitalised with a broken leg and Nick the florist cum money launderer).

The book refers to political events of the seventies and eighties in a somewhat oblique way. This works well at one level considering that these were middle-class families but it is hard to believe anyone in Sheffield at the time could have been so unconcerned with the miners' strike or the Falklands War.

Nonetheless this is a good read - and don't be put off by the 700+ pages!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
By Tushar
Format:Hardcover
The plot is relatively simple - the story of the lives of two neighbouring families in Northern England over three decades (1970s - 1990s) set against the backdrop of social and political changes over this time. There are individual relationships which tie the two families together and ultimately come to defining moments, and quite unpredictable conclusions.

I thought this novel was excellent. The writing style was very easy to read, and the author deftly developed the characters, their personalities and the events which shaped their lives. I found it a real page turner, wanting to desperately find out how the individual characters' lives turned out. The characters were all very believable and each had a fascinating (and yet in some cases very mundane) tale to be told. I would thoroughly recommend this book to anyone who enjoys such chronicles and family dramas.

However, be warned - the hardback is very heavy and not to be recommended if you need to carry the book around with you (get the paperback instead)!
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68 of 80 people found the following review helpful
A phenomenal book 27 May 2008
By Nina
Format:Hardcover
A fascinating and absolutely rivetting novel.

I finished The Northern Clemency 4 weeks ago and have been letting it sink in. It is a wonderfully resonant novel, and the people and places still live within my head. It is, for want of a better word, a 'family saga', following the lives of two Sheffield families from the 1970s to today but it is also much more than that. It creates an entire world with a 'cast of dozens', with some marvellous cameo chapters devoted to secondary figures who make the world come alive. It is terribly emotionally involving; it made me weep twice, and this is _because_ of its sparse language that allows the reader to fill in the gaps. The book threw me in and tumbled me about, lulled me into complacency and then hurled something unexpected at me.

I loved the way we weave in and out of different people's consciousnesses, and i never quite knew where I was going to end up.

The prose in this novel is to die for. Some favourite images include the phrase ' She looked at him, sharpening a pencil in her head' and, 'He danced, moving from one foot to the other and making vague clay-shaping motions with his hands.' I hope this gives you a tiny idea of the wonderfully assured mastery of this author. I knew I was in good hands from page 1, and I wasn't let down.

I loved the build-up and the way people get mentioned on p.2 and then disappear from view until they unexpectedly reappear on p.64 in new, delightful combinations. I was entranced by the insight that suspense and surprise needn't come from the story itself but can come entirely from the plot, that is, from the way the story is presented. Unexpected revelations sneak up on you and give you delicious shivers of recognition.
I absolutely loved it. I only wish there were additional amazon stars to mete out because this deserves 7 of them. It is truly outstanding.

One of the best novels I have read ever. And I don't say this lightly. (I read a lot, and mostly so-called 'literary fiction'. To give you an idea of my taste: I love Jane Austen, Vikram Seth's 'A Suitable Boy', Italo Calvino and David Mitchell.)
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
I struggled with this one
I don't know why - can't really put my finger on it, but this one didn't really appeal and I found it very hard going. Read more
Published 13 months ago by E. Heckingbottom
A literary family drama - particularly good if you identify with the...
The Northern Clemency is a literary novel set in the 1970s (although the time span of the book covers twenty years on from that starting point). Read more
Published on 16 April 2010 by S. Diment
The Nothern Clemency
Excellent condition - arrived in really quick time - now just need to read it!!
Published on 16 Feb 2010 by B. M. SMITH
lengthy and detailed
The title is a little baffling and I confess I have a negative reaction to any title that has the rhythm of The Something Something. Read more
Published on 22 Jan 2010 by Mr. A. K. N. Bernhardt
Insightful and enjoyable
This book centres mainly on the lives of 2 families living in Sheffield from the 1970s to date, and explores the ups and downs of the relationships and interactions between each... Read more
Published on 14 Nov 2009 by Snitzy-bitz
Enjoyable narrative on family life and mundanity
I thoroughly enjoyed this novel and relished the focus on the often overlooked details of everyday life. Read more
Published on 8 Sep 2009 by A. R. Jones
No middle ground
I've had The Northern Clemancy on my reading list for several weeks but I'm sorry to say that I just can't get into this sprawling, 738 page, social narrative of a novel. Read more
Published on 26 Aug 2009 by J. Burnand
Brilliant
I read this book on holiday recently and it took me just short of three days to finish. Simply put, I couldn't put it down - I was gripped from the start. Read more
Published on 17 July 2009 by Peter Lee
Unbearably boring
After three failed attempts at reading 'The Northern Clemency' it's time for me to admit defeat. The novel is set in Sheffield during the 1970s and concerns two families in the... Read more
Published on 18 Jun 2009 by Andrew Langdon
Get this man an editor
Page after page it goes on. Cartoon characters filling pages and pages of inflated prose. Pages given over to describing details of scenes of no narrative or character... Read more
Published on 16 Jun 2009 by Reader 1
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