- Published: 1 March 2005
- ISBN: 9780099472391
- Imprint: Arrow
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 320
- RRP: $24.99
A Buyer's Market
- Published: 1 March 2005
- ISBN: 9780099472391
- Imprint: Arrow
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 320
- RRP: $24.99
I would rather read Mr Powell than any English novelist now writing
Kingsley Amis
Incalculably brilliant
TIME Magazine
He has wit, style, and panache, in a world where those qualities are in permanently short supply
The New York Review of Books
[A] comic masterpiece
Irish Times
Comic, satisfying, thought-provoking, addictive
Daily Telegraph
One of the great novel-sequences in English Literature – a wonderful portrait of society, full of insight into the complexities of human behaviour, richly detailed and shrewdly funny.
William Boyd
"A Dance To The Music of Time" is an epic, elegant masterpiece, so full of lightness and comedy that you're unprepared for how it quietly wrecks your heart.
Lauren Groff
Discovering Anthony Powell’s "A Dance to the Music of Time" has been one of the greatest pleasures of my reading life. The cool elegance of the prose, the deliciously dry humour, the confident choreography of his characters make for an incomparable treat.
Michael Palin
Powell’s novel sequence is at once a rich chronicle of 20th-century English social life and an intricately wrought work of art. It is also extremely funny, in its sly fashion.
John Banville
A masterful stylist and a wise, often hilarious observer of human nature and his times, Anthony Powell is an under-appreciated literary gem. The pleasures and dramas of the "Dance" continue to illuminate daily life.
Claire Messud
I re-read the "Dance" every five years or so and always find something new – the world has changed but the characters are evergreen. Everybody has a Widmerpool in their life.
Daisy Goodwin
It's his supreme skill in mastering a lengthily interwoven chronicle, the evolution of such a range and variety of pin-point characters, the wit and the cultural ambition that give the novel a unique place in English Literature.
Melvyn Bragg
Reading "A Dance to the Music of Time" was such a joyous experience, I remember wishing there'd been more than twelve volumes.
Roddy Doyle
The novels of Powell’s "A Dance to the Music of Time" themselves move hand in hand in intricate measure through the last century, bearing wisdom and understanding for the present. In an ever-quicker, ever-shallower world, his steadiness and wit reliably escort the reader into depth and patience. Nobody gives pattern to the spectacle of human existence like Powell.
Louisa Young