The Long Room
The Long Room book cover

The Long Room

Paperback – November 1, 2016

Price
$15.90
Format
Paperback
Pages
304
Publisher
Tin House Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1941040454
Dimensions
5 x 0.9 x 7.8 inches
Weight
12 ounces

Description

" Evoking the work of Ian McEwan and John LeCarré, but in its own clear voice , The Long Room is a gripping, sensitive page-turner, with a terrible absence at its heart." ― Sean Michaels, author of US CONDUCTORS "Its language is brilliant, a poet's language, luminous and watchful . . . [T]he grace of Kay's voice is hypnotizing, and there are moments when her empathy for Stephen makes them seem barely divisible." ― The New York Times Book Review "Here is le Carré writ small yet still tense . . . Kay is consistently entertaining in this subtle, sad psychological thriller .xa0" ― Kirkus, Starred Review " A brilliant spy novel charged with existential dread." ― Publishers Weekly "Many spy novels have complicated protagonists, but Stephen isxa0unique in his fragility, desire, and solipsism, making this a study of pathology born of loneliness. Kay...winds it all up tightly, building to a remarkably suspenseful conclusion ." ― Booklist "Ornate sentences unfurl with poetry and emotional weight . . . In this time of confusion―existential dreading, even― a book like this one grabs at our deepest fears and offers them up for examination. The Long Room is therefore more than an engaging read―it’s a compassionate reminder that we’re all at least partially blind to our most damaging fixations." ― The Dallas Morning News Francesca Kay 's first novel, An Equal Stillness , won the Orange Award for New Writers. Her second novel, Translation of the Bones , was longlisted for the Orange Prize for Fiction. Kay lives in Oxford, England.

Features & Highlights

  • Award-winning novelist Francesca Kay's new novel tells the story of a man who falls for the wrong woman.
  • London. December 1981. The IRA is on the attack, a cold war is being waged, another war is just over the horizon, and Stephen Donaldson spends his days listening. When he first joined the Institute, he expected to encounter glamorous, high-risk espionage. Instead he gets the tape-recorded conversations of ancient Communists and ineffectual revolutionaries--until the day he is assigned a new case: the ultra-secret PHOENIX, a suspected internal leak. The monotony of Stephen’s routine is broken, but it’s not PHOENIX who captures his imagination; it’s the target’s wife, Helen. Beset by isolation and loneliness, Stephen becomes dangerously obsessed with Helen, risking his job to keep his fragile connection to her and inadvertently setting himself up for a fall that will forever change his life.
  • With compassion and tenderness and moments of unexpected humor, Francesca Kay charts the way in which imagination, projection, and desire overwhelm the paucity of Stephen’s life and identity. As beautiful as it is intense,
  • The Long Room
  • explores a mind under pressure and the wilder cravings of the heart.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(64)
★★★★
20%
(43)
★★★
15%
(32)
★★
7%
(15)
28%
(60)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Whose reality is the TRUTH?

We look, but do we SEE? We listen, but do we HEAR? How much of what we see and hear is REAL? Whose reality is the TRUTH?

It took me a little longer than usual to "get into" THE LONG ROOM, but I was glad that I "held on" and didn't jump ship. The further into the book I got, the faster I read and the less I wanted to put it down. As more details were revealed, the more I understood the characters and the less I had a handle on what was going on. I was breathless by the end and didn't want it to be over. At first, I was frustrated because I felt like some things were left hanging and unanswered. After letting it set for a couple days, I am more of the belief that the loose ends were meant to be that way because that IS the way it is. That is the way life is and goes on ... and doesn't. (Michanne Reese)
2 people found this helpful
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Long Room, very looooong read.

This novel probably would have worked better as a short story. It defies belief that the main character, Stephen, had not heard of Orford Ness or that he would not have sought out information about Orford and its surrounding areas once he learns that Helen is going to her mother's there. The slow pace and the repetitive descriptions and thoughts of Stephen are very tedious.
2 people found this helpful
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Listeners

Patient readers are those most likely to enjoy reading Francesca Kay’s novel titled, The Long Room. This book is a character study of protagonist Stephen Donaldson who works as a listener for a British spy agency called the Institute. He and his workplace colleagues are divided into units and work in a long room. His obsession with the wife of a subject of his listening breaks him away from his numbing routine and leads him eventually to a radical change in his life. The pacing of the novel is often very slow, and some readers will long for more action and momentum. I found Kay’s insight into the mind of this interesting character brought me satisfaction enough to offset some tedium.

Rating: Three-star (It’s ok)
1 people found this helpful
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Another great book

A superb book by an astonishingly talented writer. Each of the three novels she has published so far is not only excellent but also different in subject matter and form. I can't wait for her next book.

(PS: the categories above are juvenile and inappropriate in assessing literary works of this calibre)
1 people found this helpful
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An interesting feminine take on an otherwise tired genre. Glad I found it!

"The Long Room" is a literary twist on the spy thriller genre. It is also a thoroughly contemplative look at individual despair. Maybe it's the rain or cold weather, but it felt uniquely British. Aspects of the espionage experience didn't feel fully developed, but the central character is definitely on the backstage of the action (trapped in a room), so the one-dimensional aspects of his work are completely understandable. This is exactly the type of suspenseful, moody head examination I loved back when I was single. An interesting feminine take on an otherwise tired genre. Glad I found it!
1 people found this helpful
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Don't waste your time

I have no problem with a slow paced novel which is done intenitionally to impart the characters existence and mindset, however the reader does need to feel drawn to the tedium. This writing is just impossibly dull.
Also, do not wish to insert gender into the conversation but the author really missed how men are programmed. Men can surely obssess over a woman but the manner in which her character does so is clearly done from a female persepective.
1 people found this helpful