#1 NEW YORK TIMES BEST SELLER ON PRESIDENT OBAMA S SUMMER READING LIST
A BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR: VOGUE ESQUIRE GLAMOUR NPR GOODREADS O MAGAZINE
Remarkable The emotional impact of this novel is less visceral than A LITTLE LIFE but only because the author s scope is so vast and her dexterity so dazzling .TO PARADISE demonstrates the inexhaustible ingenuity of an author who keeps shattering expectations .she explores the dream of freedom that lures all these characters to risk everything for a paradise they desire but can barely envision. No matter the setting past present or future TO PARADISE stems from the hypnotic confluence of Yanagihara s skills. She speaks softly, with the urgency of a whisper. She draws us into the most intimate sympathy with these characters while placing them in crises that feel irresistibly compelling.
Ron Charles, The Washington Post
We are given a patriarch, wealth, children; there is an arranged marriage, an inheritance, a true love, a class divide and a significant twist. Deftly paced and judiciously detailed, the tale makes hay with the conventions of the 19th-century novel. But that s not all. With breathtaking audacity Yanagihara rewrites America .Yanagihara masterfully repurposes themes, situations and motifs This ambitious novel tackles major American questions and answers them in an original, engrossing way. It has a major feel. But it is finally in [its] minor moments that Yanagihara shows greatness.
Gish Jen, The New York Times Book Review (cover review)
"The confounding, brilliant, intricate, beautiful, horrific To Paradise is if this string of adjectives did not sufficiently convey it an extraordinary book. Divided into three seemingly distinct sections, positioned a hundred years apart, the book is one-part historical fiction (set in 1893), part present-ish-day chronicle (1993), and part futuristic sci-fi story (2093). (That last chapter, which must have been informed by, if not fully drafted within, the pandemic, presents a dystopian future filled with 'cooling suits' required to venture outside and 'decontamination chambers' to ward off the ever-present possibility of infection.) Those who consumed Yanagihara s most recent work, A Little Life, will not be surprised that this book, like its predecessor, is interested in pain and suffering more than joy and happiness. But it is also a book full of gloriously painted scenes, tantalizing connection, and despite all its gutting turns, one that maintains an abiding hope for the possibility and power of love. (That may just be the only paradise truly on offer.) In and of themselves, some sections feel in some ways quite conventional, but taken together with all of their extreme cliffhangers and unanswered questions the stories seem to be asking: what do we want from a novel? Resolution is not available here, but some of the most poignant feelings that literature can elicit certainly are."
Vogue
Sometimes literature takes time to digest momentous events... Occasionally, though, a masterpiece emerges from the white heat of the moment: The Great Gatsby, The Decameron, The Waste Land. There's something miraculous about reading To Paradise while the coronavirus crisis is still playing out around us, the dizzying sense that you're immersed in a novel that will come to represent the age, its obsessions and anxieties. It's rare that you get the opportunity to review a masterpiece, but To Paradise, definitively, is one.
The Observer (London)
"Sweeping, lush, and gorgeously written."
NPR
"To Paradise" is a novel of the highest order. Yanagihara writes with elegance, evoking emotion and rendering believable characters who move the plot. Her perceptive eye is evident in the three separate settings, placing the reader in each time frame through multiple narratives, which she orchestrates with great acuity. Themes of love and belonging reign in Book I and Book II. In Book III, fear trumps love for a mimesis of reality, hitting close to home for all of us right now."
Wayne Catan, USA Today
Hanya Yanagihara s critically-acclaimed A Little Life was an intimate, close-up portrait of four men and their love, shame, and existential loneliness. Her new book, To Paradise, is a sprawling, yet similarly intimate epic that is also focused on love, shame, and existential loneliness. Other than these shared themes (and heft), the two books have little in common besides Yanagihara s masterful, transfixing writing, and her ability to plumb the depths of her characters at their most despicable and at their most tender. On the surface, what ties the three books together are the repetition of character names (David, Charles, Edward, etc.) and the house on Washington Square Park that appears in each book in one iteration or another. But there are deeper, more ineffable ties, in the form of moral and political questions: What does it mean to be free? What does it mean to be protected? Does the latter preclude the possibility of the former? Are gilded cages any less restrictive for being gilded? To Paradise doesn t definitively answer these questions, but revels in ambivalence rather than moral absolutes, making it a rich, emotional, and thought-provoking read.
Boston Globe
"Tour de force Yanagihara changes the novel landscape: What is different, we accept; what is familiar, we recognize. To Paradise resonates because of its exploration of human relationships and the dismantling of preconceived notions. Biases and hatreds lurk and linger, emerging periodically to remind us that while one form of discrimination may have been eliminated, others remain embedded in our institutions, and cannot easily be eradicated; in the end, threads of prejudice bind all three parts. And yet To Paradise is rich with characters that live and love, with few boundaries. Yanagihara asks us to consider an alternative America that could have existed at any point in history if other decisions had been made, and that might still prevail if we do the right thing."
Oprah Daily
Gigantic, strange, exquisite, terrifying, and replete with mystery.
Kirkus Reviews (starred)
An extraordinary novel; powerfully imagined and deeply moving.
The Bookseller (London)
A tale of manners, family, migration, and political dystopia that reads like Edith Wharton meets Jonathan Franzen meets Mohsin Hamid meets George Orwell.
Vanity Fair
To Paradise boldly rewrites America s past, present and future. Featuring three distinct fin-de-siècle periods 1893, 1993 and 2093 the result is a spectacular tripartite fiction. Here is an alternative country in which profound questions of family, inheritance, sovereignty, identity and, above all, the meaning of freedom, are dazzlingly held up to the light .To Paradise is, like [A Little Life], a complex work of intertwined human relationships, but it is also sublimely readable .The finale of To Paradise is a masterstroke, simultaneously thriller-esque and intensely moving.
The Financial Times
TO PARADISE is a transcendent, visionary novel of stunning scope and depth. A novel so layered, so rich, so relevant, so full of the joys and terrors the pure mystery of human life, is not only rare, it s revolutionary.
Michael Cunningham, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of THE HOURS
Hanya Yanagihara s TO PARADISE is as good as WAR AND PEACE.
Edmund White
Hanya Yanagihara interrogates love and history in a novel that feels prophetic, but in fact rises from the oldest of human themes: ardor, shame, and our most profound protective instincts. She builds a future narrated by vulnerable yet sturdy Charlie, a merciful heart burning for all creation. To Paradise is a world of its own, a major work, and one of the rare books equipped to tell us what it means to be an American.
Louise Erdrich, Author of Pulitzer Prize winning The Night Watchman and NYT Bestseller The Sentence
Hanya Yanagihara lives in New York City.
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