Review 'This is writing that forces you to pay close attention... A powerful story about one man pitted against the elements, with echoes of Hemingway... but original in its underlying poignancy; the story telling is stripped to its bare essentials' -- The Times'Arresting... Jones is a highly accomplished writer in whose hands such elemental raw materials turn strange and fugitive... Though his novels often turn on sudden shocks, the real power of his prose lies in its slow accumulation of energy around dimly apprehended points of tension... Part of what's impressive about the book is that it holds its own. One might expect some level of its allusiveness, an acknowledgement of literature's other lost sailors. But Jones's writing has a cool independence, aloof from others' words' -- Guardian'Jones strips the story down to its elemental core and much of it reads like a prose poem. His vivid descriptions allow us to feel the man's physical discomfort and flagging spirit... Cove is about the dangerous, unknowable rhythms of the sea... about devastation [...] love, loss, memory and the will to live... A haunting meditation on trauma and human fragility' -- Financial Times'Charting a course somewhere between Life of Pi and Paul Kingsnorth's Beast, Cove is a minimal, occasionally mysterious, man-versus-the-elements fable... there's plenty under the surface of the terse, telegraphic prose... Cove repays attentive parsing' -- Observer'The writing [is] spare and economical... lyrical... short and intense' -- Sunday Telegraph'A narrative as stripped of detail as its protgaonist is of his memories, which nonetheless proves curiously powerful' -- Sunday Times'Jones's brutally, beautifully distilled, almost incantatory language is entirely his own... an extraordinary novel that tugs on the ideas of home and homecoming, is full of scorchingly simple phrases [...] and is saturated with a stealthy symbolism concerning fathers and sons, man and God and the fathomless mysteries of the natural world. It's Jones's fifth book and, with its sure sense of the ineffable nature of things, speaks louder than many a novel three times its length' -- Daily Mail'Jones's writing, although stripped back, is delicate and poetic... If Hemingway's prose resonates with universal truth, Jones's shimmers with suggestiveness and ambiguity' -- Scotland on Sunday'This undersung Welsh writer specialises in sinewy, sliver-thin novels that trash cosy notions about benevolent Mother Nature... Pungent with jeopardy, the atmosphere is stark and elemental, with a faint hint of allegory in the plight of the unnamed protagonist' -- Metro 'Painful, moving, energising and intensely thrilling... Immensities happen in this slim book... wildly rewarding and utterly exhilarating' -- Spectator 'Intensely vivid... startlingly original... Jones's prose - concise, rhythmical and studded with arresting imagery - enacts the rocking motion of a boat at sea. A powerful study of human vulnerability and resilience' -- Lady 'I'll be popping this very short novel into several stockings this Christmas: it's one of the most haunting novels I've read in years. Jones's exquisitely turned sentences - more poetry than prose - force the reader to slow right down, confronting us with every tiny sinew of the man's determined efforts to survive. Jones is an uncompromising writer and the situation his protagonist faces is dire. Yet this is also a heartbreaking novel, alert to the ineffable mystery of man's aloneness in the natural world, but also sure-footed on the emotional ties that bind' -- Books for Christmas, Daily Mail 'Less than 100 pages long but carries more weight than most novels I read this year. It's both exciting and intense, written with a care for each word' --John Self, Best Books of 2016, Irish Times'Astonishing, here the story of a man getting lost at sea becomes a powerful, moving and exceptionally memorable story in about as few words as possible. Read it and then read it again' -- Country and Town House 'Cynan Jones -is- utterly brilliant. The writing is so delicate and cruel and insightful. I don't understand why no statues have been erected in his honour yet' -- Eimear McBride, TLS '[Cove] packs a punch far above its weight... A gruelling, gripping read, a ragged desperate search for a safe haven... There's no slack here, every word counts in prose that's stripped back and pared down to something akin to poetry. It's Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea meets JC Chandler's maritime disaster film, All is Lost. Nature at its most brutal, and man at his most exposed, poised between 'myth'... and 'legend'' Country File Magazine 'Cove is the latest and most accomplished of Jones's works. It once again proves Jones's formidable talent. The book is confusing and demanding and damning and everything and anything and nothing. Above all else, however, Cove is beautiful, all too beautiful' -- Huffington Post 'Jones plugs directly into the reader's nightmares with his fifth novel, an ultra-minimalist tale of an injured man adrift at sea in a wrecked fishing boat... pared back to the very essentials. There is not a word wasted in these short, sharp, epigraphic paragraphs that rival even Hemingway in their terseness... At only 95 pages of skeletal prose, it's as taut as trapped fishing line, and possibly most effective when read in one sitting -though it may not be healthy to let your heart stop beating for that long' -- Press Association'In a time when novels are getting more robust, replete with increasingly ostentatious, over-embellished writing, Cove comes as a breath of fresh air... In this slim novel Jones sketch[es] a formidable portrait of the fury of nature. In his visceral descriptions of the mighty sea, birds and fish, his stark primal style is reminiscent of that of Ted Hughes' poetry. There is a cinematic thrill to his writing, which induces a sense of pulsating alarm in the reader... Cove is an extraordinary novel [and] a thrilling, immersive experience' -- Wales Art Review'Cove is like some experiment in mortifying asceticism, an experiment so successful that every word has significance and the simplest line on the starkest page can slap you hard like a sudden wave as you try to land a kayak on a steep beach in a running swell, leaving you [...] struggling for a moment to catch your breath... It's hard not to be hyperbolic about this book. If someone told you that a Welshman had written a sort of Wales-set twenty-first-century homage to The Old Man and the Sea that somehow manages - in even fewer words - to be a bigger, more emotionally loaded book, you'd be forgiven for laughing. But you shouldn't laugh. You should buy Cove, and holding it very carefully, hunch yourself up over its pale pages, draw a deep breath, and begin to read...' --Tim Hannigan blog'Stunning' -- Savidge Reads 'I have found it hypnotically compelling, as exciting as it is meditative, and adored the pared down yet powerful, rippling, sensate writing. A terrific read' -- Colin Barett 'A book distilled and elemental even by Jones's standards. It's searing, unflinching, exquisitely written - for me, his best work yet' -- Tom Bullough 'To read Cove is to take a masterclass in taking out everything but the essentials. This is writing stripped back to the bone, and storytelling that gets under the skin. Powerful, terrifying, brilliantly done' -- Jon McGregor 'After the scalpel-sharp prose of The Dig here Cynan Jones cuts into the language even deeper: in this new novel he pares down the prose to shining shards and crystalline phrases. Cove finds this master of concision on remarkable form, telling a sleek tale about one man and a boat which lingers hauntingly in the mind. At a time when novels are getting bigger and more bloated, this goes the other way - showing us how choice words in perfect order can expand the horizon well beyond a simple line' -- Jon Gower 'A masterclass in concision, in trimming away everything extraneous until what remains is a short, stark, shock of a book where every word crackles with electricity... Jones' language shimmers with a suggestive poetry... The power of Jones' writing lies not in moments of shock and drama, but in the slow buildup of a dimly apprehended tension, felt in the pit of the stomach... It's in these moments of subtle horror that Cove truly grabs you' --Josh is Writing blog About the Author Cynan Jones was born near Aberaeron, Wales in 1975. He is the author of three novels, The Long Dry (winner of a Betty Trask Award, 2007), Everything I Found on the Beach (2011), and The Dig (2014). He is also the author of Bird, Blood, Snow (2012), the retelling of a medieval Welsh myth. Cove was also selected for the Wales Book of the Year Fiction Prize and a short story drawn from it, published in the New Yorker as 'The Edge of the Shoal', won the BBC National Short Story Award 2017. www.cynanjones.com
N**R
Short, snappy and interesting
Read this cover-2-cover on a 2 hour train ride. Great read. Beautifully written.
J**D
A good idea but..
Yes, a lone kayaka adrift at sea with a slight memory of what has happened it is good premise, but I didn't find the story gripping.
C**.
Losing the cove
Loved the familiar descriptions of the sea and its treachery.The words arebeautiful. The story captivates. Brief yet powerful.
G**S
Five Stars
Ordered for my brother in law he was so pleased with this book and it also arrived very promptly
A**S
Short and moving.
In Cove we follow the experience of a fisherman who is struck by lightening whilst out on the sea in his kayak. It was a great decision by Jones to use a blend of the second/third person perspectives to narrate his journey through this hell, it gave the reader a chilling and raw reading experience. The fisherman is injured badly, with loss of an arm and severe burns imprisoning him inside the kayak. The struggle for survival and reaching the shore is the core plot in Cove and CJ documents the experience with the man's thoughts, emotions and physical pain.The other main aspect of the story is the fact that the fisherman is haunted by fractured and distant memories of his life and his pregnant love. Both the present and the past bleeding into each other and urging him to stay alive and reach land. Cove is a mesmerising and deeply moving story and I thought Jones did a superb job making it emotional, rigorous and primal. The writing style was unique to me, I have not had the chance to check out Cynan Jones' work before and I would happily return to his work in the future.My only fault with this book was the ending, I cannot go into too much detail here but let's just say I wanted the story to continue much further than it did. Cove is very brief, under 100 pages, so you can easily read it in one sitting, what I really liked about this book was that you can re-read it plenty of times and it will still have a different feel and impact on you as you work out more and more of what Jones is really saying.The stripped down nature of this book highlights how much injury the human body can take and how your life can really change in a flash. The main themes were simplistic but also powerful including survival, family and nature. The atmosphere was generally pain, confusion and desperation, but also of wanting to live and see his wife and child. The fisherman's struggle was deep and I found myself invested in him and the intensely difficult journey to the shore.Overall, I was blown away by the fact that a book so small could contain such a deeply moving story. I thought Jones used great language and concepts to bring the story of the injured fisherman to us and I encourage everyone to pick up Cove and see what you think to the reading experience. I mention again that I didn't really feel satisfied with the ending, I wanted more to go on, but that is a personal opinion and one that won't affect your enjoyment of the same book.
A**E
Not for me
This book has had brilliant reviews and was shortlisted for the Wales Book of the Year fiction prize. Maybe I’m missing something, but I just didn’t get it. Basically, it’s about a man marooned at sea in a kayak, but the style is confusing, presenting events out of order and chopping and changing between tenses and points of view. The beginning very nearly put me off altogether, as it was written in present tense second person POV, which I find irritating – I only continued because I was reading it for book club. There’s some guff in the beginning about a dead bird and a missing child that seems to have no relevance to the rest of the story, and I found the ending deeply unsatisfactory.
A**R
Five Stars
As Well good arrived still not read
D**N
A Powerful Story About A Man In A Kayak.
A man is adrift on a kayak, miles out to sea. He is injured. During a storm he was struck by lightning. He is having problems remembering anything, his name, and details of his previous life. The man's memory is like a dropped pack of cards.His condition is so bad that he is struggling to even survive. The only thing keeping him from giving up is his slight recollections of the past. This is a simple story told in sparse English. It is very similar to the author's previous book, The Dig, which was widely acclaimed.The narrative matches the threadbare state of the injured man. It is pared to the bone and is very effective and powerful. Here and there there are echoes of The Life of Pi.
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