Winner of the 2023 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction.
Hernan Diaz's first novel, In the Distance, was a finalist for the 2018 Pulitzer Prize and the PEN/Faulkner Award. He is also the author of a book of essays, and his fiction has appeared in The Paris Review, Granta, McSweeney's, and elsewhere. A recipient of a Whiting Award and the winner of the William Saroyan International Prize, he has been a fellow at the New York Public Library's Cullman Center for Scholars and Writers. His work has been translated into more than twenty languages. Trust is his second novel.
Brilliant . . . Destined to be known as one of the great puzzle-box
novels, it’s the cleverest of conceits, wrapped up in a
page-turner
*Telegraph*
Fascinating . . . Diaz could master any genre and Trust is
metafiction at its best, unpredictable, clever and massively
enjoyable
*Sunday Times*
Genius . . . You’re propelled forward by the twists and turns of
the novel’s form, the conviction that Diaz has another trick up his
sleeve
*Observer*
Diaz is a narrative genius whose work easily encompasses both a
grand scope and the crisp and whiplike line. Trust builds its world
and characters with subtle aplomb. What a radiant, profound and
moving novel
*Lauren Groff, author of Fates and Furies*
Sharp and affecting . . . In this literary Rubik’s Cube, Diaz
provides a viable, and hugely entertaining, argument that once a
pen is put to paper an element of veracity is always lost. And when
money is thrown into the mix, then the lies really multiply
*Financial Times*
A tricksy, tantalising delight . . . Enthralling — delicate,
detailed and deliciously stealthy
*Daily Mail*
Intricate, cunning and consistently surprising . . . Diaz has the
whole literary past at his fingertips . . . [an] exhilarating and
intelligent novel
*New York Times Book Review*
A sublime, richly layered novel. A story within a story within a
story.
*Roxane Gay, author of Bad Feminist*
Exquisite . . . A clever, literary kaleidoscope that constantly
challenges the realities it puts forward, requiring you to step
back, and look again
*i*
Destined to become one of the great novels of our time . . . A
literary page-turner that offers compulsive reading with exquisite
prose . . . Surprising, engrossing and beautifully executed
*Irish Times*
Engrossing . . . Diaz perfects different voices with remarkable
agility
*The Herald*
Through perfectly formed sentences and the skilful unpicking of
certainties, Trust creates a great portrait of New York across an
entire century of change . . . A work possessed of real power and
purpose . . . It’s a testament to Diaz’s cunning abilities as a
writer that you end his book thinking that – if truth is your goal
– you might be better off relying on a novelist than a banker
*Guardian*
Trust glints with wonder and knowledge and mystery. Its plotlines
are as etched and surreal as Art Deco geometry, while inside that
architecture are people who feel appallingly real. This novel is
very classical and very original: Balzac would be proud, but so
would Borges.
*Rachel Kushner, Man Booker-shortlisted author of The Mars
Room*
A rip-roaring, razor-sharp dissection of capitalism, class, greed,
and the meaning of money itself that also manages to be a dazzling
feat of storytelling on its own terms . . . Uniquely brilliant . .
. exhilarating . . . a novel for the ages.
*Vogue*
Immaculate. TRUST is a work of assured virtuosity, lightly-worn
wisdom, and immense impact.
*Kiran Millwood Hargrave, Sunday Times bestselling author of
The Mercies*
That rare jewel of a book - jaw-dropping storytelling against the
backdrop of beautiful writing. Amidst all the noise in the world,
whole days found me curled up on the couch, lost inside Diaz’s
brilliance
*Jacqueline Woodson, author of Red at the Bone*
A virtuoso performance . . . A spellbinding tale that illuminates
the impact of money on all of our lives . . . Trust is that rare
thing: a beautifully crafted novel that dares to confront some of
our deepest socioeconomic schisms
*Oprah Daily*
Like four exquisite dioramas, Diaz has set up all of these stories
with great precision to present two fundamental questions: Why do
we tell stories? And at what cost are those stories told? . . . A
remarkably accessible treatise on the power of fiction. This
unquestionably smart and sophisticated novel not only mirrors
truth, but helps us to better understand the truth.
*Boston Globe*
For all its elegant complexity and brilliant construction, Diaz's
novel is compulsively readable . . . A captivating tour de force
that will astound readers with its formal invention and
contemporary relevance.
*Booklist, starred review*
Diaz's Trust exposes the wild power that narrative holds . . . over
the economy, historiography, hierarchies, over a person's life,
truth, over the reader. A powerful, sinister tale in the form of a
nesting doll, around which the modern economy fashions larger and
larger macho casings
*Caoilinn Hughes, author of The Wild Laughter*
Rich and prismatic . . . Excellent
*Wall Street Journal*
An elegant, irresistible puzzle
*Washington Post*
Riveting story of class, capitalism, and greed. The result is a
mesmerizing metafictional alchemy of grand scope and even grander
accomplishment
*Esquire*
Trust speaks to matters of the most urgent significance to the
present day . . . Cleverly constructed and rich in surprises, this
splendid novel offers serious ideas and serious pleasures on every
beautifully composed page
*Sigrid Nunez, author of The Friend*
Like a tower of gifts waiting to be unwrapped, Trust offers a
multitude of rewards to be discovered and enjoyed . . . compelling
. . . engrossing . . . a beautifully composed masterpiece
*BookPage*
Trust proves that Diaz is a writer of singular talent. This book is
a kaleidoscopic dazzler that works as both an engrossing literary
mystery and a capitalistic takedown for the ages. Don't miss
it.
*Chicago Review of Books*
Diaz cleverly weaves the disparate strands together while showing
how our shifting perception of the story relates to wealth’s
ability to “bend and align reality” to its own motives
*New Yorker*
Gripping . . . Trust is about the bigger lies we tell about
capitalism and individual ability, about our society and ourselves,
and about the price we are willing to pay to maintain such
illusions
*Vulture*
In this glorious puzzle of a novel, perspectives keep shifting and
the wealth of one early-twentieth-century family keeps changing its
origin-story. What a joy this is to read, suspenseful at every
turn, the work of a rare and impressive talent.
*Joan Silber, author of Secrets of Happiness*
The audacity and scope of Hernan Diaz’s extraordinary novel - a
prism, a mystery, a revelation - are brilliantly matched by the
quality of his prose.
**
This masterpiece of a book-within-a-book explores how public
perception and reality can get twisted
*Good Housekeeping*
Wondrous . . . a kaleidoscope of capitalism run amok in the early
20th century, which also manages to deliver a biography of its
irascible antihero and the many lives he disfigures during his rise
to the cream of the city’s crop. Grounded in history and formally
ambitious, this succeeds on all fronts
*Publishers Weekly*
Diaz has organized his nesting-doll novel so ingeniously that the
tricks merely thrum in the background as the intricate plot
unfolds, following a tycoon couple forward to a novel about their
“history,” then back and forth through diaries, recriminations and
reversals. The result shouldn’t be missed.
*LA Times*
Engrossing . . . Diaz's ingenious new fiction, told in four
overlapping parts, challenges conventional story lines of another
favorite American theme: capitalism and the accumulation of vast
wealth.
*Star Tribune*
A dazzling novel about wealth, capitalism and who exactly gets to
tell the story.
*The Bookseller*
Ingenious, thrilling . . . the novel brilliantly weaves its
multiple perspectives to create a symphony of emotional effects . .
. A clever and affecting high-concept novel
*Kirkus, starred review*
A uniquely layered novel . . . Each page peels back another
mystery, making for an utterly riveting read
*Buzzfeed*
A novel that unpeels like an onion, upending the story you first
hear. The Pulitzer Prize-finalist explores wealth, power, the
dynamics of American capitalism, and the nature of truth in an
inventive way that stacks up to one engaging, beautiful whole
*Daily Beast*
Trust makes a surprisingly un-postmodern case for what the novel
can do
*The New Yorker*
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