Review
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Alarmingly good . . . both a Great American Novel as well as a great American novel... aches with all-new
relevance. (Guardian)
A superb debut novel . . . could well be the most ambitious novel of the year... It seems like Hill is a writer who can
do pretty much what he wants. (Daily Telegraph)
Compulsive and crazily entertaining (Anthony Quinn Observer)
Impressive that a debutant, Nathan Hill, with his scintillating The Nix has given us a character who comes close to
out-Trumping Trump . . . Just one of the many pleasures of this engaging story of a mother and son whose private
travails become front-page news. (New Year Highlights Observer)
The best thing a reviewer can do when faced with a novel of this calibre and breadth is to urge you to read it for
yourselves – especially if your taste is for deeply engaged and engaging contemporary American prose fiction of real
quality and verve. (Ed Docx Guardian)
The best new writer of fiction in America. The best. (John Irving)
We're in the presence of a major new comic novelist . . . a brilliant, endearing writer . . . Readers . . . will be
dazzled. (Washington Post)
I got a big kick out of Nathan Hill's impressive first novel, The Nix (Picador), out in the UK next year. Hill's
zeitgeisty portrayals of video game addiction and customer-oriented university education are brilliant. (Lionel Shriver,
'Books of the Year 2016' Observer)
Hill has so much talent to burn that he can pull off just about any style, imagine himself into any person and
convincingly portray any place or time. The Nix is hugely entertaining and unfailingly smart, and the author seems
incapable of writing a pedestrian sentence or spinning a boring story (New York Times Book Review)
There is an accidental topicality in Hill's debut, about an estranged mother and son whose es hinge on two
mirror-image political events - the Democratic Convention of 1968 and the Republican Convention of 2004. But beyond that
hook lies a high-risk, high-reward playfulness with structure and tone: comic set pieces, digressions into myth, and
formal larks that call to mind Jennifer Egan's A Visit From the Goon Squad. (New York Magazine)
Book Description
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The instant New York Times No. 5 bestseller, a gloriously ambitious, witty and deeply touching debut novel of
fifty years of America and of American radical protest, the story of a son, the mother who left him as a child, and how
his search to uncover the secrets of her life leads him to recl his own.
From the Inside Flap
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A gloriously ambitious, witty, and deeply touching debut novel of fifty years of America and of American radical
protest, the story of a son, the mother who left him as a child, and how his search to uncover the secrets of her life
leads him to recl his own.
Meet Samuel Andresen-Anderson: stalled writer, bored teacher at a local college, obsessive player of online video games.
He hasn't seen his mother, Faye, in decades, not since she abandoned her family when he was a boy. Now she has suddenly
reappeared, having committed an absurd politically motivated crime that electrifies the nightly news, beguiles the
Internet, and inflames a divided country. The media paints Faye as a radical hippy with a sordid past, but as far as
Samuel knows, his mother was an ordinary girl who married her high-school sweetheart. Which version is true? Two things
are certain: she's facing some serious charges, and she needs Samuel's help.
As Samuel begins to excavate his mother's - and his country's - history, the story moves from the rural Midwest of the
1960s to New York City during the Great Recession and the Occupy Wall Street movement, and back to the infamous riots at
the 1968 Chicago Democratic National Convention. Finally, the trail leads him to wartime Norway, home of the mysterious
Nix that his mother told him about as a child, a spirit that can take the shape of a white horse, luring children to
their deaths. And in these places, Samuel will unexpectedly find that he has to rethink everything he ever knew about
his mother - a woman with an epic story of her own, a story she has kept hidden from the world.
From the Back Cover
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'It broke my heart, this book. Time after time. It made me laugh just as often. I loved it on the first page as
powerfully as I did on the last, and I think I was right, right from the start. Because Nathan Hill? He's gonna be
famous. This is just the start.' US National Public Radio
'Hill has so much talent to burn that he can pull off just about any style, imagine himself into any person and
convincingly portray any place or time. The Nix is hugely entertaining and unfailingly smart, and the author seems
incapable of writing a pedestrian sentence or spinning a boring story.' New York Times Book Review
'We're in the presence of a major new comic novelist . . . What a brilliant, endearing writer Hill is . . . Readers will
be dazzled.' Washington Post
'A great sprawling feast of a first novel . . . Hill writes with an astonishingly sure hand . . . Let's just call him
the real thing.' Newsday
'So spot-on it's frightening . . . That it's so entertaining, so full of energy, and packed with social and political
observations that adroitly destabilize our comfortable assumptions about modern life is a triumph.' Huffington Post
About the Author
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Nathan Hill was born in Iowa in 1975 and lives with his wife in Nes, Florida. The Nix is his first novel.