J.M. Coetzee's work includes Waiting for the Barbarians, Life & Times of Michael K, Boyhood, Youth, Disgrace, Summertime, The Childhood of Jesus and, most recently, The Schooldays of Jesus. He was the first author to win the Booker Prize twice and was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2003.
If The Pole and Other Stories were his [Coetzee's] final work, it
would be astonishing... Beneath plain-spoken surfaces unexpected
depths are often revealed, glinting with flashes of playful
seriousness, humour, and grand, existential strangeness
*Guardian*
In The Pole, Coetzee forges an autofiction of contemplation, in
which thought and inquiry take precedence over melodrama — because
time is running out
*Financial Times*
These stories are… touched with a moral intensity… striking
*Literary Review*
JM Coetzee is a great writer, perhaps one of the greatest still
around… This is Coetzee at his most lugubrious and beguiling: if it
turns out to be one of his last works, it can easily claim to be
one of the best occasional utterings from a novelist who is as
notoriously reclusive in person as he is piercingly acute in
writing
*Big Issue*
The Pole…confirms Coetzee as one of the great writers of fiction…
[and] shows that, at 83 years old, there is no diminishing of his
talents. Long may he darken our pages with prose
*Observer*
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