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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Jesse BallPublisher: HarperCollins Publishers Inc Imprint: Collins Dimensions: Width: 13.50cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 20.30cm Weight: 0.181kg ISBN: 9780062676122ISBN 10: 0062676121 Pages: 240 Publication Date: 13 October 2020 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsA book that contemplates, with the gravity and grace it deserves, a world beyond the point of no return..... Stunning.... The book's final section, in which a woman confronts the violence within herself, is one of the more beautiful things I've ever read. --Paris Review Affecting... Uncomfortably familiar.... [The Divers' Game] should certainly make you question what kind of world we are preparing for the generations to come. --AM New York Jesse Ball ( Census ) levels a steely gaze at the very concept of humanity in this three-part novel that introduces the lower-class quads and the rich pats, who treat those below them with impunity. When a group of pats conceals the grisly fate of a young quad girl behind an elaborate festival, you may start to wonder just how different this dystopian world is from our own. --Washington Post Radical.... If they don't teach Ball's work in college by now, they should.... Readers who appreciate Ball's keen, melancholic, and often sadly satirical view of human society will likely appreciate this timely assessment of where division might take us and how it affects the generations that come after us. --Kirkus Reviews Mesmerizing... Ball (Census) delivers a strident condemnation of inequality in an imagined nation.... The novel's depiction of life in this dystopian world is eerie and suffused with symbolic weight. --Publishers Weekly Jesse Ball is a writer of formal mysteriousness and neon moral clarity... His language is spare, strange, and evocative.... His themes are human savagery, often state-sanctioned, and human kindness, a thin thread of resistance.... The final section [of The Divers' Game] is breathtaking. --The New Yorker Ball (Census, 2018), a writer of exceptional and pensive imagination, adds another trenchant fable to his distinctively disquieting oeuvre.... One hears the beat of Animal Farm.... Writing with blood-freezing sparseness, Ball illuminates this calamitously immoral place.... Distressingly mirrors aspects of our own [world]. --Booklist It's hard to read a book like 'The Divers' Game' -- in which an unnamed nation receives an influx of refugees and abandons the notion of human fellow feeling -- and not immediately think of the present moment.... [An] interlocking puzzle box of a novel, artful and often inscrutable... The society in 'The Divers' Game' uses rituals like festivals and games to paper over its own violence. They merely reveal how untenable that violence is. --New York Times Book Review Jesse Ball is a writer of formal mysteriousness and neon moral clarity... His language is spare, strange, and evocative.... His themes are human savagery, often state-sanctioned, and human kindness, a thin thread of resistance.... The final section [of The Divers' Game] is breathtaking. -- The New Yorker A book that contemplates, with the gravity and grace it deserves, a world beyond the point of no return..... Stunning.... The book's final section, in which a woman confronts the violence within herself, is one of the more beautiful things I've ever read. -- Paris Review It's hard to read a book like 'The Divers' Game' -- in which an unnamed nation receives an influx of refugees and abandons the notion of human fellow feeling -- and not immediately think of the present moment.... [An] interlocking puzzle box of a novel, artful and often inscrutable... The society in 'The Divers' Game' uses rituals like festivals and games to paper over its own violence. They merely reveal how untenable that violence is. -- New York Times Book Review Jesse Ball ( Census ) levels a steely gaze at the very concept of humanity in this three-part novel that introduces the lower-class quads and the rich pats, who treat those below them with impunity. When a group of pats conceals the grisly fate of a young quad girl behind an elaborate festival, you may start to wonder just how different this dystopian world is from our own. -- Washington Post Affecting... Uncomfortably familiar.... [The Divers' Game] should certainly make you question what kind of world we are preparing for the generations to come. -- AM New York Radical.... If they don't teach Ball's work in college by now, they should.... Readers who appreciate Ball's keen, melancholic, and often sadly satirical view of human society will likely appreciate this timely assessment of where division might take us and how it affects the generations that come after us. -- Kirkus Reviews Mesmerizing... Ball (Census) delivers a strident condemnation of inequality in an imagined nation.... The novel's depiction of life in this dystopian world is eerie and suffused with symbolic weight. -- Publishers Weekly Ball (Census, 2018), a writer of exceptional and pensive imagination, adds another trenchant fable to his distinctively disquieting oeuvre.... One hears the beat of Animal Farm.... Writing with blood-freezing sparseness, Ball illuminates this calamitously immoral place.... Distressingly mirrors aspects of our own [world]. -- Booklist A book that contemplates, with the gravity and grace it deserves, a world beyond the point of no return..... Stunning.... The book's final section, in which a woman confronts the violence within herself, is one of the more beautiful things I've ever read. --Paris Review Affecting... Uncomfortably familiar.... [The Divers' Game] should certainly make you question what kind of world we are preparing for the generations to come. --AM New York Ball (Census, 2018), a writer of exceptional and pensive imagination, adds another trenchant fable to his distinctively disquieting oeuvre.... One hears the beat of Animal Farm.... Writing with blood-freezing sparseness, Ball illuminates this calamitously immoral place.... Distressingly mirrors aspects of our own [world]. --Booklist Jesse Ball ( Census ) levels a steely gaze at the very concept of humanity in this three-part novel that introduces the lower-class quads and the rich pats, who treat those below them with impunity. When a group of pats conceals the grisly fate of a young quad girl behind an elaborate festival, you may start to wonder just how different this dystopian world is from our own. --Washington Post Jesse Ball is a writer of formal mysteriousness and neon moral clarity... His language is spare, strange, and evocative.... His themes are human savagery, often state-sanctioned, and human kindness, a thin thread of resistance.... The final section [of The Divers' Game] is breathtaking. --The New Yorker Mesmerizing... Ball (Census) delivers a strident condemnation of inequality in an imagined nation.... The novel's depiction of life in this dystopian world is eerie and suffused with symbolic weight. --Publishers Weekly Radical.... If they don't teach Ball's work in college by now, they should.... Readers who appreciate Ball's keen, melancholic, and often sadly satirical view of human society will likely appreciate this timely assessment of where division might take us and how it affects the generations that come after us. --Kirkus Reviews It's hard to read a book like 'The Divers' Game' -- in which an unnamed nation receives an influx of refugees and abandons the notion of human fellow feeling -- and not immediately think of the present moment.... [An] interlocking puzzle box of a novel, artful and often inscrutable... The society in 'The Divers' Game' uses rituals like festivals and games to paper over its own violence. They merely reveal how untenable that violence is. --New York Times Book Review Author InformationJesse Ball is the author of fifteen books, and his works have been translated into more than a dozen languages. He is on the faculty at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, a winner of The Paris Review's Plimpton Prize for Fiction and the Gordon Burn Prize, and was long-listed for the National Book Award. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |