Produktbild: Small Boat

Small Boat A Novel

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

21.04.2026

Verlag

Harper Collins Publ. USA

Seitenzahl

128

Maße (L/B/H)

12,7/19,1/2,2 cm

Gewicht

210 g

Farbe

Graublau

Übersetzt von

Helen Stevenson

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-06-349169-4

Beschreibung

Rezension

"A gut-punch of a novel...Small Boat explores the power of the individual and asks us to consider the havoc we may cause others, the extent to which our complacency makes us complicit - and whether we could all do better."
-The 2025 Booker judges on Small Boat

"We are all reflected in the complex, unlikeable, utterly human, and nearly redeemable protagonist of the brilliant, slim novel Small Boat. This story of migrants drowning in the English Channel is a must read book of our time, this time in which we daily bear witness to a multitude of preventable tragedies just across our phone screens, and like Delecroix's rescue operative narrator, convince ourselves that we are helpless to act." -Hannah Lillith Assadi, author of Sonora and The Stars Are Not Yet Bells

"A brutally fearless exploration of migration and our complicity in the face of tragedy. Not only does this thorny, firecracker of a novel ask large, provocative questions about the plight of migrants, it is expertly crafted to take every reader beyond the headlines and sensationalism that plague one of the defining human rights issues of our time. Small Boat is political fiction at its absolute best."
-Ruben Reyes

"Vividly translated by Helen Stevenson, and currently on the shortlist for this year's International Booker Prize, Small Boat is painful, compelling and mercifully short, with a powerful undertow."
-Times Literary Supplement (London)

"Delecroix is both a novelist and a Kierkegaard expert: both pursuits lend themselves to the imagination of ethics at crisis point. Think of Small Boat as a philosophical ghost story."
-Telegraph

"The narrator accuses those who judge her of hypocrisy and will only see herself as a cog in the administrative wheel of a France that will not give refuge to the world's misery. As strong and cruel as the times we live in."
-Paris Match

"A work of sickening power, it's won a deserved place on the International Booker shortlist."
-Daily Mail (London)

"A powerful reimagining of a migrant tragedy."
-Financial Times

"A work of striking empathy."
-Monocle

"This book challenged me profoundly. It moved me, and stayed with me. It's not an easy read - but as our politics descend into hate-mongering and point-scoring, it's an essential story that needs to be told."
-Dua Lipa

"Shocking and unsettling, Small Boat is an unforgettable modern tragedy."
-Paula Hawkins

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

21.04.2026

Verlag

Harper Collins Publ. USA

Seitenzahl

128

Maße (L/B/H)

12,7/19,1/2,2 cm

Gewicht

210 g

Farbe

Graublau

Übersetzt von

Helen Stevenson

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-06-349169-4

EU-Ansprechpartner

HarperCollins Publishers Ireland
Macken House, 39/40 Mayor Street Upper
D01 C9W8 Dublin 1
IE
enquiries@harpercollins.ie

Herstelleradresse

HarperCollins Publishers US
195 Broadway
10007 NY
US
consumercare@harpercollins.com

Kundinnen und Kunden meinen

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“I did not tell them to leave.”

Rina aus Mannheim am 26.02.2026

Bewertungsnummer: 3058725

Bewertet: eBook (ePUB)

I have mixed feelings about this book. It is a very short novel, and I would say I really liked the first half. But saying that I “liked” it feels strange, because the subject is very disturbing. The book is based on a real tragedy. A small boat with migrants is sinking in the waters between France and England. The people on board call for help. The French authorities say the boat is in British waters. In the end, no one comes to rescue them. The boat sinks, and around 30 people lose their lives. After this, the novel focuses on the woman who answered the emergency call. She is being questioned, and we follow the story mostly through her thoughts. What makes the book so uncomfortable is that she does not see any fault in what she did. She stands by her decision. She keeps repeating the same sentence: “I did not tell them to leave.” Being inside her mind feels heavy. It is difficult to read because you are forced to see her way of thinking. I do not agree with her at all, but the book makes you understand how she justifies her actions. It becomes a psychological story about responsibility, denial, and emotional distance, especially in the context of immigration. The first half felt strong and intense. But in the second half, the repetition became too much for me. I understand that this was probably intentional, to show how fixed she is in her thinking. Still, it felt dragged out, and my interest slowly faded. In the end, I gave it three stars. It is an important and thought provoking book, and it gives a lot to discuss. But overall, it felt a bit uneven to me.

“I did not tell them to leave.”

Rina aus Mannheim am 26.02.2026
Bewertungsnummer: 3058725
Bewertet: eBook (ePUB)

I have mixed feelings about this book. It is a very short novel, and I would say I really liked the first half. But saying that I “liked” it feels strange, because the subject is very disturbing. The book is based on a real tragedy. A small boat with migrants is sinking in the waters between France and England. The people on board call for help. The French authorities say the boat is in British waters. In the end, no one comes to rescue them. The boat sinks, and around 30 people lose their lives. After this, the novel focuses on the woman who answered the emergency call. She is being questioned, and we follow the story mostly through her thoughts. What makes the book so uncomfortable is that she does not see any fault in what she did. She stands by her decision. She keeps repeating the same sentence: “I did not tell them to leave.” Being inside her mind feels heavy. It is difficult to read because you are forced to see her way of thinking. I do not agree with her at all, but the book makes you understand how she justifies her actions. It becomes a psychological story about responsibility, denial, and emotional distance, especially in the context of immigration. The first half felt strong and intense. But in the second half, the repetition became too much for me. I understand that this was probably intentional, to show how fixed she is in her thinking. Still, it felt dragged out, and my interest slowly faded. In the end, I gave it three stars. It is an important and thought provoking book, and it gives a lot to discuss. But overall, it felt a bit uneven to me.

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Small Boat

von Vincent Delecroix

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