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Review: To the End of the Land

Falling short of genius

August 26, 2010 10:18
Grossman: brilliant creation but lacking humour and political flexibility

ByDavid Herman, David Herman

2 min read

By David Grossman
Jonathan Cape £18.99

The lavish praise already heaped upon David Grossman's huge, ambitious new novel - Paul Auster has called it "a book of overwhelming power and intensity" and compares Grossman to Flaubert and Tolstoy; Nicole Krauss has written: "Very rarely, a few times in a lifetime, you open a book and when you close it again nothing can ever be the same" - is vastly overstated.

At his best, Grossman is certainly a great writer. But, like Philip Roth, he is one of those great writers who can be very uneven, producing whole chapters of breathtaking genius, side by side with clunky and sentimental prose.

The opening 50 pages, introducing Ora, the central character, show Grossman at his very best. And whenever he moves from everyday realism to offer a glimpse of the true strangeness of his characters' lives, the novel catches fire.