From the author of the international bestseller Night Train to Lisbon, a riveting novel about a father's boundless love for his daughter as her obsessive desire to become a concert violinist drives them both to the brink of destruction
INTERNATIONAL PRAISE FOR LEA
"A novella about an artist's development . . . genius and madness, love and betrayal, fury and self-destruction, all carefully arranged to make a stunning portrait." -Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
"Perfectly constructed, exciting, entertaining, enigmatic, memorable." -Buchkultur
"Although the characters' feelings become ever more complex and their actions less and less logical, the story itself never feels over-complicated or illogical, let alone sentimental. The frightening depths of the characters' emotions are crossed by a kind of suspension bridge built by the author." -Neue Zürcher Zeitung
PRAISE FOR NIGHT TRAIN TO LISBON
"Rich, dense, star-spangled . . . The novels of Robert Stone come to mind, and Elias Canetti's Auto-da-Fe, and Thomas Mann's Death in Venice, and Kobo Abe's The Ruined Map, not to mention Marcus Aurelius and Wittgenstein . . . [but] what Night Train to Lisbon really suggests is Roads to Freedom, Jean-Paul Sartre's breathless trilogy about identity-making." -Harper's magazine
"Celebrates the beauty and allure of language . . . adroitly addresses concepts of sacrifice, secrets, memory, loneliness, infatuation, tyranny, and translation. It highlights how little we know about others." -Chicago Sun-Times
"The text of Amadeu's writing is filled not with mere nuggets of wisdom but with a mother lode of insight, introspection, and an honest, self-conscious person's illuminations of all the dark corners of his own soul." -Seattle Times
"Dreamlike . . . A meditative, deliberate exploration of loneliness, language and the human condition . . . rewards readers with the generous gift of beautiful writing and some unforgettable images." -San Diego Union-Tribune
"A smart, heartfelt, thoroughly enjoyable book written for thinking adults, and the most recent incarnation, from Hermann Hesse's Steppenwolf right down to Carlos Ruiz Zafon's The Shadow of the Wind, of that potent, ever-popular myth-the book that changes your life." -Shelf Awareness
"A compelling blend of suspenseful narrative and discursive commentary . . . an intriguing fiction." -Kirkus Reviews
"A meditative novel that builds an uncanny power through a labyrinth of memories and philosophical concepts that illuminate the narrative from within . . . a remarkable immediacy that makes for a rare reading pleasure." -San Francisco Chronicle
PRAISE FOR PERLMANN'S SILENCE
"Absorbing . . . [Mercier] understands the soft sniping that sustains academic rivalries and draws wry comedy from them." -New Yorker
"An engrossing deep study of one man's mind. Superb." -Evening Standard
"What might have been, in less talented hands, an amusing literary thriller is, in Mercier's prose, superbly translated by Shaun Whiteside, something far more complex . . . Mercier's previous novel to be published here, the deservedly popular Night Train to Lisbon, showed great intelligence and story-telling power; Perlmann's Silence is a bolder attempt, and reaches greater depths." -Alberto Manguel, The Guardian (UK)
"Mercier has a flair for vivid characterization, and has created a personality-rich tapestry of human interaction . . . A hearty feast for the thinking reader . . . an utterly satisfying emotional rollercoaster." -Nick DiMartino, Shelf Awareness
"For readers of a philosophical bent, appreciative of slowly unfolding, elegant tales, this will be a pleasure." -Kirkus Reviews