Critic Reviews
Good
Based on 7 reviews on
"Osborne is a startlingly good observer of privilege, noting the rites and rituals of the upper classes with unerring precision and an undercurrent of malice."--Katie Kitamura, The New York Times Book Review, on Beautiful Animals
ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR: The Washington Post, CrimeReads
After two decades as a journalist in Hong Kong, ex-pat Englishman Adrian Gyle is ready to turn his back on the city he knew so well. But as Hong Kong erupts in violence with pro-democracy demonstrations hitting ever closer to home, could this be the final assignment Gyle was looking for?
Watching from the skyrises is his old friend Jimmy Tang, the scion of one of Hong Kong's wealthiest families. Through him Gyle uncovers an intriguing lead: the mysterious Rebecca, a student involved in the protests, and the latest of his Jimmy's reckless dalliances. But when Rebecca goes missing and Jimmy hides, it rekindles in Gyle an old urge to investigate.
Piecing together Rebecca's final days and hours, Gyle must tread carefully through a volatile world of friendship and betrayal. Vividly capturing a city on the brink, On Java Road tells the gripping story of a man between the fault lines of old worlds and new orders in pursuit of the truth.
Chris Bohjalian is a writer.
Really enjoyed Lawrence Osborne’s new novel, ON JAVA ROAD, and the chance to delve deeply into his work for @nytimesbooks. https://t.co/kTfPpqxNSu https://t.co/xud8nnYQmr
The Asian Review of Books is a dedicated pan-Asia book review publication. (Tweets of other publications' reviews/articles and retweets are for interest only.)
Weekend listening: @lawrenceosborne talks about his recent novel, the Hong Kong-set, “On Java Road” on the ARB/@NewBooksNetwork podcast https://t.co/3T4TAtwblu https://t.co/tJOFLJIK1H
I am a photographer living in New York. I work as a photo editor at The New York Times. First monograph ‘Hong Kong’ to publish April 2, 2024 by Kehrer.
Just finished this and loved it. Particularly recommend to anyone who lived in the city through the protests. Would make a great movie. Bravo @lawrenceosborne https://t.co/LVjNY88BnX
"To open a new Lawrence Osborne book is to enter a maze of thrills from which there is no exit other than to finish the book in one sitting."--Molly Young, The New York Times
"Shades of Graham Greene and Patricia Highsmith fall across [Osborne's] colorful pages. Like both, he has a nomadic imagination strongly responsive to the lure of the foreign and enthralled by duplicity, mistrust, and betrayal. Like Greene, he favors down-at-heel figures who have a kind of shabby integrity. Like Highsmith, he is fascinated by glamorously amoral sociopaths. . . . His most compulsive [novel] yet."--Sunday Times (London)
"[Osborne writes] sensual, provocative, and riveting portraits of lives and places in flux. . . . [His] recurring focus on expats and foreign landscapes has drawn comparisons to Graham Greene and Paul Bowles, but Osborne's subject is not the postwar period; it's the globalized, post-9/11 present."--The Washington Post
"Osborne is the bard of modern-day expat noir, and in On Java Road he's outdone himself, packing the usual preoccupations (estrangement, existential ennui, spiritual restlessness) in unceasingly compelling surroundings: Hong Kong in tumult . . . [bringing] together a story of privilege, wealth, passion, and loyalty, while also providing incisive cultural insights and full-blooded characters. Osborne's prose is as precise and observant as ever, and On Java Road is a novel that will leave readers shaken long after they've finished reading."--CrimeReads
"This winning mystery from Osborne . . . makes a city beset by unrest, countered by harsh repression, feel palpable, and the dynamic between two college friends of different socioeconomic backgrounds will remind many of Brideshead Revisited. Those patient enough to wait for the mystery plotline to kick in will be rewarded."--Publishers Weekly
"The book is like a whodunit turned inside out. . . . Hong Kong comes fiercely alive on the page, and Osborne's command of complex history, geography, and politics (and poetry) is nuanced and sure-handed. . . . Moody and compelling."--Kirkus Reviews
"Osborne is an ambitious novelist, and this is more than just a story about courage in Hong Kong. . . . Democracy and freedom of the press require courage. Does Adrian have that courage? Do we? Osborne is too clever a writer to reach a conclusion, but the overall effect of this timely, elegantly written novel is unsettling and concerning."--The Spectator (UK)
"Sure to be dripping with an eerie atmosphere and peculiar twists."--Fodors