Burial customs
- Pages: 420
- ISBN: 978-960-572-039-1
- Publication: 2014
- Dimensions: 13,3 x 20,5 εκ.
- Categories: Literature, eBooks, Foreign Literature
Life is a sarcophagus. Literally. It is simply the place that changes, the era that changes, tells us Hannah Kent from Australia, the new great talent of English-language literature.
– Maria Houkli, protagon.grHannah Kent wins her bet, as she quickly makes the reader care less about the facts—that is, who was responsible for the murders—and more about understanding this dramatic heroine.
– Konstantinos Bougas, Kathimerini"...A well-written story set in distant, frozen Iceland. ‘Burial Customs’ deals with the country’s last case of capital punishment. A book that moves and, at the same time, challenges the reader. Kent’s literary debut sets the bar high and raises expectations among the public who adored the book...”
– Artcoremagazine.grA story of renegotiating reality, re-evaluating our prejudices, and re-examining the philosophical concept of guilt and the motives behind a crime. A work that is deadly in its development, combining the thrilling romanticism of ‘Gothic’ literature with the revisionist tendency of the feminist novel that traces the ‘voice’ of the marginalised woman of the provinces in the early nineteenth century.
– Nikos Xenios, bookpress.grExceptional. Writing of the highest quality. A work imbued with hidden love. And as such, priceless. ‘Mother, I am the unfortunate one, the dark thrush…’ Alexandros Papadiamantis had addressed his mother in moments of anguish. Ágnes Magnúsdóttir, the dark thrush of a world—our world—that leaves no room for escape. Or flight. P.S. It would be an oversight on my part not to mention the translation by Maria Angelidou. The very finest.
– Eleni Sarantiti, diastixo.gr"...The narrative keeps the reader’s interest alive, prompting thoughts and reflection, but above all evoking emotions and sympathy for the heroine, who cannot be characterised and judged solely by her actions, but also by her intentions and motives – just as is the case with everyone’s lives."
– Eleni Kouneni, CuetoenterHannah Kent
Hannah Kent was born in Adelaide, South Australia, in 1985. Her first novel, Burial Rites (Ikaros, 2014), became an international bestseller, was translated into 28 languages and won the following awards: ABIA Literary Fiction Book of the Year 2014, ABA Nielsen Bookdata Bookseller’s Choice Award 2014, 2014 Indie Awards Debut Fiction of the Year, Victorian Premier’s Literary Award People’s Choice Award 2014 and FAW Christina Stead Award 2013.
Her second novel, The Good People (Ikaros, 2017), has been translated into 10 languages and was shortlisted for the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction, the Indie Book Award for Fiction and the ABIA Literary Fiction Book of the Year.
Her third novel, Worship (Ikaros, 2022), has just been published in English and has been longlisted for the 2022 Indie Book Award for Fiction.
Hannah Kent is co-founder and editor-in-chief of the Australian literary magazine Kill Your Darlings.