| Author | Anne Michaels |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Publisher | Knopf[1] |
Publication date | 2023 |
| Publication place | Canada |
| Pages | 240 |
| ISBN | 9780593536865 |
Held is a 2023 novel by writer and poetAnne Michaels, published byKnopf, a subsidiary ofPenguin Random House. An epic novel, spanning a time period from 1908 to 2025, the work tells the story of multiple members of a family spanning four generations, and various other people who are connected to them in some way. The locations or settings are varied and include a French battlefield duringWorld War I, 1900sParis, mid-20th centurySuffolk, 2025 inFinland, andLondon. Two of the settings are war zones.
The narrative is told unconventionally, shifting between past, present and future. Although the relationship between the different settings and characters is not always immediately apparent, several themes recur throughout the narratives. These include mortality and death, the philosophy of science, love, the soul, grief, and forms of image capture such as photography.
The novel was shortlisted for the2024 Booker Prize,[2] and won the 2024Giller Prize.[3]
In a review inThe Observer, novelistAlice Jolly noted thatHeld revisits the themes of Michaels' earlier works,Fugitive Pieces andThe Winter Vault: "history, memory, the effects of trauma and grief over long periods, and the power of love to heal even the most grievous pain." She praised the way in which the book does so using "personal, hypersensitive and profoundly interior" writing which "continues to stand head and shoulders above most other fiction."[4]
Views on the novel's structure were mixed. Writing forThe Guardian, writer and historianLucy Hughes-Hallett said that the non-chronological manner in which the narrative is told — moving back and forth between different eras, with interspersed memories, dream sequences and meditations of different characters — makes the work more profound.[5] In contrast, in a negative review in theTimes Literary Supplement,Andrew Motion said that the novel has less "imaginative energy" than Michaels' previous novels. He felt that the elliptical plot, lack of character development and lack of establishing the settings essentially makes the characters "ciphers for the author's obsessions."[6]