In this magisterial, exquisitely erudite novel, the insomniac meditations of the bedridden and lovelorn musicologist Franz Ritter take the reader on a vast, crisscrossing perambulation through the rich history of the commingling of Orient and Occident in the 19th and early 20th centuries.-- "The New York Times"
A fever-dream meditation on East and West and a lost love that binds the two worlds... Lyrical and intellectually rich without ever being ponderous, reminiscent at turns of Mann's Death in Venice and Bowles' Sheltering Sky.-- "Kirkus Reviews (starred review)" (3/10/2017 12:00:00 AM)
Compass is as challenging, brilliant, and--God help me--important a novel as is likely to be published this year.--Justin Taylor "The Los Angeles Times" (3/10/2017 12:00:00 AM)
Énard's prose, which tends to pile descriptive clauses ever higher on top of one another... can be mesmerizing. But it's the larger project of his writing that bears particular consideration: in his fiction, Énard is constructing an intricate, history-rich vision of a persistently misunderstood part of the world.-- "The New Yorker" (3/10/2017 12:00:00 AM)
Énard has written a masterful novel...-- "The Washington Post" (3/10/2017 12:00:00 AM)
Mr. Énard fuses recollection and scholarly digression into a swirling, hypnotic stream-of-consciousness narration. [...] So this sad yet invigorating novel is both a love letter to a vanishing discipline and an elegy. Franz's mental circumnavigations constitute a celebration of the civilizing power of knowledge and 'the beauty of sharing and diversity.'--Sam Sacks "The Wall Street Journal" (3/10/2017 12:00:00 AM)
Compass is poetic, ironic, irresistible.--Jane Ciabattari "BBC" (3/10/2017 12:00:00 AM)
For all its sandstorm of scholarship, translated with tireless eloquence by Charlotte Mandell, Compass aches with that simple yearning. 'Only love' of a person or a culture, thinks Franz under the stars of Syria, 'opens us up to the other.'-- "The Economist" (3/10/2017 12:00:00 AM)
[H]is most far-reaching and accomplished book and one of the finest European novels in recent memory.--Adrian Nathan West "Literary Review" (3/28/2017 12:00:00 AM)
[A] brilliant, elusive, outré love letter to Middle Eastern art and culture.--Dustin Illingworth "Los Angeles Review of Books" (6/27/2017 12:00:00 AM)
Compass, in its relentlessly discursive impressiveness, embodies an uncompromising vision of the novel as relatively static political and cultural essay.-- "The Guardian" (3/10/2017 12:00:00 AM)
A novelist like Énard feels particularly necessary right now, though to say this may actually be to undersell his work. He is not a polemicist but an artist, one whose novels will always have something to say to us.--Christopher Beha "Harper's Magazine" (3/10/2017 12:00:00 AM)
In a time of fear and loathing, Énard's magnum opus points us toward the reality behind so many myths of the Orient.-- "New Republic" (3/10/2017 12:00:00 AM)
This astonishing, encyclopedic, and otherwise outré meditation by Énard on the cultural intersection of East and West takes the form of an insomniac's obsessive imaginings--dreams, memories, and desires--which come to embody the content of a life, or perhaps several.... [An] opium addict's dream of a novel.-- "Publishers Weekly" (3/10/2017 12:00:00 AM)
[A] masterly new novel that attempts to redeem the specter of the Orient...-- "Library Journal" (6/27/2017 12:00:00 AM)
Mathias Énard is the most brazen French writer since Houellebecq.-- "New Statesman" (3/10/2017 12:00:00 AM)
Compass is a novel about many things. At its surface it is about the pull of unmet dreams and ambitions. The falsities of love. But at the crux of this examination of a human life is the fabric of cultures intersecting--and in the truth that the pathos of grief exempts no one.--Yasmin Roshanian "EuropeNow" (3/10/2017 12:00:00 AM)
Mathias Énard has found a way to restore death to life and life to death, and so joins the first rank of novelists, the bringers of fire, who even as they can't go on, do.--Garth Risk Hallberg "The Millions" (3/10/2017 12:00:00 AM)
It's with no small amount of urgency that Mathias Énard's Compass, an engrossing meditation on the cultural and historical tension between Europe and the Islamic world, arrives from New Directions in a gorgeous translation by Charlotte Mandell.--Hal Hlavinka "Quarterly Conversation" (6/12/2017 12:00:00 AM)
Comparisons of Compass with The Thousand and One Nights and with Proust (and Ritter thinks about both) are not only inevitable, but necessary.--Frank Richardson "Numero Cinq" (3/10/2017 12:00:00 AM)