The Lighthouse
Translation Prize for English-Language Literature.
- Pages: 216
- ISBN: 978-960-9527-99-6
- Publication: 2013
- Categories: Literature, eBooks, Foreign Literature
Like Woolf, Moore makes extensive use of association to unfold her characters’ pasts through a multitude of small, insignificant details or smells. With raw and sharply descriptive language, she captures all the vulgarity and harshness of their mundane lives, where not a single ray of light penetrates. She explores relationships dominated by anguish, loneliness, a sense of loss and constant abandonment.
– Lila Konomara, oanagnostis.grWhat is most striking about Moore’s fine novella is its simplicity, the understated and calm narrative, which has a slow and evolving pace, culminating in the last 10 pages of the book and leading to an unexpected ending with a thriller-like feel.
– LibrofiloClosing the book (here, the lighthouse is merely a lighthouse-shaped perfume bottle, which evokes associations and floods the characters with memories), we find ourselves in agreement with the review published in The Guardian: it is a novel that explores grief and loss. It also examines abandonment and the anguish it causes. Ultimately, it is a work without dramatic peaks, yet one that evokes many and varied emotions.
– Filippos Filippou, diastixo.grAlison Moore
Alison Moore was born in Manchester in 1971. Her short stories have been published in various magazines and anthologies, including Best British Short Stories 2011. She was shortlisted for the Bridport Prize, the Manchester Fiction Prize and the Scott Prize for her first collection of short stories. She won first prize in the novella category of The New Writer’s Prose and Poetry Prize. The Lighthouse was shortlisted for the 2012 Man Booker Prize. Alison Moore lives near Nottingham with her husband Dan and her son Arthur.