This section contains 161 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) |
"That Distant Afternoon" is a subtle and uncannily penetrating novel, and by the time we have reached its final, fascinating page we have observed something momentous: a young and very human being has taken several long strides toward maturity….
[Although] Mr. Fuller is a wit and an ironist, he respects his characters; he knows (and irrefutably demonstrates) that a boy of fourteen or fifteen is at least as complex and as worthy of concentrated attention as any adult. He also commands a polished, supple, almost immaculate style; and part of its delight is a constant play of simile—often surprising, always original and strikingly apt—in which much of the wit and the illumination resides. "That Distant Afternoon" may be on a small scale, but it is first rate, an accomplished, impressive and continuously entertaining novel.
Dan Wickenden, "A Young, Very Human Being," in New York Herald Tribune...
This section contains 161 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) |