Reader Score
71%
71% of readers
recommend this book
Critic Reviews
Good
Based on 5 reviews on
On the Sunday of his eighteenth birthday, in 1975, Colin takes a walk on Box Hill, a biker hang-out. There he accidentally trips over Ray, a biker napping under a tree - and that's where it all starts. This transgressive, darkly affecting love story between men, winner of the 2019 Fitzcarraldo Editions Novel Prize, is a stunning novel of desire and domination by one of Britain's most accomplished writers.
Adam Mars-Jones' first collection of stories, Lantern Lecture, won a Somerset Maugham Award in 1982, and he appeared on Granta's Best of Young British Novelists lists in 1983 and 1993. His debut novel, The Waters of Thirst, was published in 1993 by Faber & Faber. It was followed by Pilcrow (2008) and Cedilla (2011), which form the first two parts of a semiinfinite novel series. His essay Noriko Smiling (Notting Hill Editions, 2011) is a book-length study of a classic of Japanese cinema, Yasujiro Ozu's Late Spring. His memoir Kid Gloves was published by Particular Books in 2015. He won the 2019 Fitzcarraldo Editions Novel Prize for Box Hill. He writes book reviews for the LRB and film reviews for the TLS.
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#PWFictionPrompt: Inspired by Adam Mars-Jones’s novel Box Hill: A Story of Low Self-Esteem, write a story in which your narrator has an extreme view of themselves, whether vain or self-deprecating. What effect does this have on how your story develops? https://t.co/WlwBm61RFr https://t.co/wawlQUczbW
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Box Hill by Adam Mars-Jones: A young man literally falls into a strange relationship with an older man. https://t.co/NpyGARfV9m
Ian Mond is a writer and book critic.
Books Read: Batlava Lake by Adam Mars-Jones It’s short (novella length), all voice and has a punch in the gut ending. I know I have a Box Hill lying around here somewhere. I’ll read it this year (assuming I can find it), and buy his other novels. This is the good stuff. https://t.co/V5yeR28a0D
'The biggest small book of the year.'
-- John Self, Guardian
'An exquisitely discomfiting tale of a submissive same-sex relationship ... perfectly realised.'
-- Anthony Cummins, Observer
'I very much enjoyed Box Hill. It is a characteristic Mars-Jones mixture of the shocking, the endearing, the funny and the sad, with an unforgettable narrator. The sociological detail is as ever acutely entertaining.'
-- Margaret Drabble
'Adam Mars-Jones has never needed to write at great length to convince readers of his talent.... Mars-Jones's latest work is a sliver of a novel that provides ample evidence of his prowess.... Box Hill is not a novel for the prudish, but it is a masterclass in authorial control.... Despite its diminutive length, it is rich with detail and complexity, and has plenty to demonstrate Mars-Jones's well-deserved place on any list of our best.'
-- Alex Nurnberg, Sunday Times
'A clever and subtle novel.'
-- Max Liu, Financial Times
'The very best novel of the year was Adam Mars-Jones's complex, shifting and sensationally lewd Box Hill - for once in 2020 a novel written not to make an approved point or demonstrate its author's virtue but to explore calmly the wildest stretches of human behaviour. Its subject is cruelty, both theatrically performed and executed in reality, without costumes. A masterpiece that Dame Ivy would have been greatly interested by.'
-- Phillip Hensher, Spectator