Skios: A Novel
Skios: A Novel book cover

Skios: A Novel

Paperback – May 28, 2013

Price
$18.00
Format
Paperback
Pages
272
Publisher
Picador
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1250032140
Dimensions
5.5 x 0.61 x 8.5 inches
Weight
8.3 ounces

Description

“Immensely entertaining...Michael Frayn is a master of that most frantic of genres: the door-slamming, coincidence-splattered, slapstick-studded genre of farce.” ― Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times “Expertly written, genuine fun... Frayn builds his puzzle so painstakingly and tells his story so engagingly, you want to jump in his lap and build a nest.” ― Alex Witchel, The New York Times Book Review “Are you, perhaps even now, searching for the perfect comic novel for the beach, the hammock or some lazy summer weekend? Say ‘yes' to any of these questions and you should immediately head for your bookstore to buy a copy of Frayn's new book, Skios , a romantic comedy constructed with the quick cutting and pace of a Marx Brothers movie…This is one of the most amusingly complicated novels since David Lodge's Small World . By page two, readers will know without any doubt that they are in for a wonderful time.” ― Michael Dirda, The Washington Post “A paragon of academic satire, this novel is also a shining example of the drama of mistaken identities…Like much of Frayn's work, Skios is a virtuoso performance, and very funny, but underneath it all is a melancholy truth: many people are unhappy with who they are and wouldn't mind being mistaken for someone else.” ― The New Yorker “A masterly crafted farce...Frayn is so devilishly good at clicking the pieces into place that watching him build his contraption is its own entertainment.” ― Entertainment Weekly “Fiendishly funny...Frayn creates a convincing world so endearingly vulnerable to this kind of mayhem that farce seems inevitable, yet you wind up rooting for the irredeemably irresponsible protagonist to get away with it.” ― North Coast Journal “A witty Rube Goldberg construction of a novel...Think Being There set to the staccato pacing of Noises Off , and hold on to your funny bones.” ― Library Journal “Truly does make you laugh out loud. I sniggered on the train and the bus; I sniggered in the kitchen, the bedroom and, on one occasion, in the shower. I wasn't reading the book in the shower, obviously. But I was thinking about it, and that was enough-- Skios really is hilarious.” ― The Observer (UK) “In the hands of someone less accomplished, the events in Skios would be too improbable...As it is, you can sit back and let the book lap over you like the warm waters surrounding this Greek isle.” ― The Spectator (UK) “The pieces of this intricate farce click into place with all the assurance you'd expect from the author of Noises Off ...The denouement is pitch-perfect. Guaranteed to make many an appearance on holiday-reading lists this summer.” ― Daily Mail (UK) “Awkward sexual encounters, mistaken identities and buffoonish caricatures of powerful men and women litter the plot of this engaging, even bawdy comedy... Skios sparkles with a precise, theatrical timing.” ― The List (UK) “A cracking read. At the almost-close of proceedings, Frayn lifts the curtain to map out what might have happened--revealing the authorial hand guiding the action. It's a deft and clever touch...If you've always regarded farce as something you don't have to dally with, Skios could well the book to change your mind.” ― Bookmunch (UK) Michael Frayn was born in London in 1933 and began his career as a journalist on the Guardian and the Observer. He has written seventeen plays, including Noises Off, Copenhagen , and Democracy , translated Chekhov's last four plays, and adapted his first as Wild Honey. His screenplays include Clockwise , starring John Cleese, and among his eleven novels are The Tin Men , Towards the End of the Morning, Headlong , Spies , and Skios . Collections of articles include Collected Columns , Stage Directions , and Travels with a Typewriter. He has also published two philosophical works, Constructions and The Human Touch , and a memoir, My Father's Fortune. His most recent publications are three collections of short entertainments, Matchbox Theatre, Pocket Playhouse , and Magic Mobile. He is married to the writer Claire Tomalin.

Features & Highlights

  • Longlisted for the Man Booker Prize and a
  • Washington Post
  • Notable Book of the YearOn the private Greek island of Skios, the high-paying guests of a world-renowned foundation prepare for the annual keynote address, to be given this year by Dr. Norman Wilfred, an aging and ponderous authority on the scientific organization of science. He turns out to be surprisingly youthful and charming, and everyone is soon eating out of his hand.Meanwhile, in a remote villa at the other end of the island, the ravishing Georgie has agreed to spend a furtive horizontal weekend with a notorious schemer, who has characteristically failed to turn up. Trapped there with her instead is a pompous, balding individual called Dr. Norman Wilfred, who has lost his whereabouts, his luggage, and his temper―indeed, everything he possesses other than the text of a lecture on the scientific organization of science.In a spiraling farce about upright academics, ambitious climbers, and dotty philanthropists, Michael Frayn, "the god of farce" (
  • Entertainment Weekly
  • ), tells a story of personal and professional disintegration, probing his eternal theme of how we know what we know even as he delivers us to the outer limits of hilarity.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(254)
★★★★
20%
(169)
★★★
15%
(127)
★★
7%
(59)
28%
(238)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Hilarious, outragious, a total delight

I loved and laughed with every page of this book ,it was a hilarious story of crazy near misses and outrageous coincidences. It was a subtle yet clever commentary on how pompous and easily taken in we can all be in our everyday life. I just loved the two taxi drivers and would love to see this story made into a movie. When I put down this book I felt a little bit more lighted hearted in the way I see the world .
1 people found this helpful
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FUN

FUUUNNNY
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but found it rather dull because it was much too repetitive

I expected it to be as hilarious as NOISES OFF, but found it rather dull because it was much too repetitive. A much shorter version might have been more amusing.
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Great Beach Read

Great beach read. Anyone who enjoyed the play Noises Off will like this madcap novel.
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Two Stars

Tedious waste of time. However, I highly recommend "Headlong," which was a masterpiece of its type.
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Chaos at the Foundation

This madcap farce, covering approximately two days in the life of a European foundation and its guests, is an entertaining and light-hearted romp through the foibles of academics, intellectuals, foundation devotees, and the international plutocracy. Poor Dr. Norman Wilfred, world-renowned expert on the scientific management of science. All he is planning to do is give yet another version of his standard speech to yet another adoring audience. But things are never that simple, or at least not when a two-timing schemer, a jilted lover, an easily-duped foundation benefactor, various fat cats with pretensions to sophistication, wealthy gangsters, and a couple of warted taxi drivers get involved. The result, in Frayn's skilled hands, is a poke in the eye of the self-important, the superficial, and the status-anxious. The book is entertaining, and the characters are engaging enough for a short time. Skios is a nice holiday, beach, or airplane diversion.
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Thoroughly enjoyable!

Thoroughly enjoyable! Much like a Shakespeare comedy with mistaken identities, this novel has delightful characters who stumble (with some slight degree of innocence) into roles they are unfamiliar with, and watching them adjust or try to get back to their correct places is classically comical. The author is very artful at keeping things mixed up & the reader entranced with the mix-ups. A light read that lets you escape into the world of a Grecian island, its inhabitants and visitors, and watch as it all the mix-ups unfold and reach resolution.,
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Farce, pure and simple farce

Kingsley Amis was shortlisted three times for the Booker Prize (with “Ending Up” in 1974, “Jake’s Thing” in 1978 and finally winning the prize with “The Old Devils” in 1986), Frayn has been on the shortlist before with “Headlong” back in 1999. So a “masterful” exponent of farce is shortlisted more often than a new kid on the block? I suppose Frayn has further opportunity to make the list in future years.

“Skios” is farce, pure and simple farce. Mix in some scientific chaos theory mumbo jumbo but it reads very much like a stiff upper lip British comic farce from the 1970’s. This year we also had “The Yips” by Nicola Barker, a comic farce with intertwined characters set for the internet generation, and personally I found that novel had a lot more depth and pathos than Frayn’s latest offering.

Put simply we are on the Greek Island of Skios, and according to this novel the original home of Athena the Greek virgin Goddess of reason, intelligent activity, arts and literature. Of course she must be hidden as we have four intertwined (although they don’t know it) main characters Dr Norman Wilfred who has been hired by the gorgeous and ambitious Nikki to give the Annual Fred Toppler Foundation Lecture on “Innovation and Governance; the Promise of Scientometrics”, and Oliver Fox a playboy self-confidant womaniser who has arranged to meet a lady who he had previously met for a grand total of 5 minutes, Georgie, for a romantic rendezvous on the island of Skios.

For my full review go to [...]
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Hysterical!

What a convoluted , complex and twisted mind he must have - and what a glorious sense of the absurd. A wonderfully entertaining romp.
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About Michael Frayn...

Frayn is a talented writer, perhaps better on the stage, as he has written numerous hits for the London stage. The novel is amusing. Not wonderful but amusing.

Did you know he is the husband of Claire Tomalin, the biographer of numerous British writers?