Alain de Botton is the author of numerous works of fiction and nonfiction, including On Love, How Proust Can Change Your Life, The Consolations of Philosophy, The Art of Travel, and The Course of Love. He lives in London where he founded The School of Life, an organization devoted to fostering emotional health and intelligence. More can be found at AlainDeBotton.com
Praise for On Love:
The Romantic Movement sheds light on the nature of
relationships...The method of telling much and showing little
produces a good deal of wit, cogency, and humor.
--John Updike, The New Yorker
A reader gets whiffs of Donald Barthelme, Julian Barnes,
Woody Allen...De Botton borrows exuberantly, and well, from
forebears [and] therein lies the buoyant charm of this
approach.
--Lisa Zeidner, The New York Times Book Review Smart and
ironic...The success of On Love has much to do with its beautifully
modeled sentences, its wry humor, and its unwavering deadpan
respect for the reader's intelligence.
--Francine Prose, The New Yorker
Praise for The Architecture of Happiness:
"De Botton has a marvelous knack for coming at weighty
subjects from entertainingly eccentric angles."
--The Seattle Times
An elegant book. . . . Unusual . . . full of big ideas. .
. . Seldom has there been a more sensitive marriage of words and
images.
--The New York Sun With originality, verve, and wit, de
Botton explains how we find reflections of our own values in the
edifices we make. . . . Altogether satisfying.
--San Francisco Chronicle De Botton is high falutin' but user
friendly. . . . He keeps architecture on a human level.
--Los Angeles Times
Praise for The Consolations of
Philosophy:
"Wonderfully original, quirky.... De Botton finds inspiration
where others might fail to look."
--Newsday "An enjoyable read... In clear, witty prose, de
Botton...sets some of [the philosophers'] ideas to the mundane task
of helping readers with their personal problems.... The quietly
ironic style and eclectic approach will gratify many postmodern
readers."
--Publishers Weekly
Praise for How Proust Can Change Your Life:
Delightfully original.... As well as being criticism,
biography, literary history, and a reader's guide to Proust's
masterpiece, this is a self-help book in the deepest sense of the
term.
--The New York Times
One of my favorite books of the year.... Seriously cheeky, cheekily
serious.
--Julian Barnes
Curious, humorous, didactic, and dazzling.... It contains more
human interest and play of fancy than most fiction.
--John Updike, The New Yorker A witty, elegant book that
helps us learn what reading is for.
--Doris Lessing A wonderful meditation on aspects of Proust
in the form of a self-help book. Very enjoyable.
--Sebastian Faulks Funny and very refreshing.
--San Francisco Chronicle
PRAISE FOR THE COURSE OF LOVE:
"The Course of Love is a return to the form that made Mr.
de Botton's name in the mid-1990s.... love is the subject best
suited to his obsessive aphorizing, and in this novel he again
shows off his ability to pin our hopes, methods and insecurities to
the page."
-The New York Times "There's no writer alive like de Botton,
and his latest ambitious undertaking is as enlightening and
humanizing as his previous works."
-Chicago Tribune "For me, the publication of any book by
Alain de Botton is as much a reason for celebration as it is for
cerebration, and his novel The Course of Love is a
satisfying look at relationships and the perils of romantic love.
This public philosopher writes with verve."
-Wall Street Journal (WSJ.com) "This book is like a
self-help book for dating and relationships, disguised as a
novel...We understand what each person is thinking and why, with de
Botton's insights sprinkled in. It made me rethink what it means to
be happy in a relationship."
-The Cut (NYMag.com) "[De Botton] analyzes Rabih's feelings,
especially, with the finesse of a therapist--and in fact there is
more than a whiff of the couch in this exemplary tale...Readers
looking for insights and guidance will find plenty."
-NPR "An engrossing tale [that] provides plenty of food for
thought."
-People (Best New Books pick) "Assured...The author
deftly delivers both sides of the marriage, exploring the
incompatible interplay of romantic love and practical love...Part
literary novel, part self-help handbook, "The Course of Love"
certainly illuminates the subtle and not-so-subtle fissures of one
modern marriage and what it takes for two people to stay together
through the years...this nontraditional novel is generous in its
spirit and message."
-San Francisco Chronicle "A cunning novel that tells of a
couple from the spark of first love, maintenance through the
demands of children and career, the challenges of boredom, and
aging. What happens to our original ideals under the pressures of
an average existence?"
-San Francisco Chronicle "A living, volatile portrait of how
two very different souls love, complement and aggravate each other.
You may not agree with all of de Botton's thoughts on marriage, but
it's wonderful how he makes such a big, sweeping subject out of
routine existence...[De Botton's] uncanny access to Rabih's and
Kirsten's contrasting feelings, aspirations, insecurities and
resentments at every changing stage of their love lives makes the
novel a marvel."
-Seattle Times '"The always-intriguing de Botton, who returns to
fiction after 20 years and numerous nonfiction books, aims to
answer the question, What is it like to be married for awhile? The
answers are often funny but also quite moving, thought provoking,
forgiving, and drenched in truth."
--Booklist "An ambitious book; one that resolves, if it cannot
change art, to widen our expectations of what we might go to a
novel for. The lives of Kirsten and Rabih...help us in a solemn way
to examine the illusions and pains that loving relationships are
heir to. The Course of Love testifies that discontented families,
if we cannot call them unhappy ones, are much alike after all."
--Flavorwire "Well-observed and imbued with a tenderness that feels
authentic and uncynical. It may even save some marriages. My bet is
that if de Botton's name were taken off this book it would be feted
by the sort of people who are in thrall to Milan Kundera and Adam
Thirlwell. He wants us to feel less alone -- and that's not such a
bad thing."
--Evening Standard (UK) "The course of true love may not run
smooth, but the storytelling certainly does in this wise, humane
and irresistibly readable history of an appealingly nuanced
relationship. De Botton deftly moves us through time, weaving in
philosophical interludes that showcase his essayistic gifts, so
that before we know it we have lived a whole life with these two,
and they are just getting started. De Botton directs his ferocious
intelligence at the most complex puzzle of all, and it seems that
no intellectual or emotional problem surpasses his ability to solve
it."
--Matthew Thomas, New York Times bestselling author of
We Are Not Ourselves "The Course of Love is a complete delight.
Not surprisingly, I feel that Alain de Botton not only wrote it for
me, but also that we must have been conversing on these subjects
happily and deeply, privately or in my dreams."
--Amy Bloom, New York Times bestselling author of
Away and Lucky Us
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