We look forward to seeing you on your next visit to the library. Find a location near you.

Lost for Words: A Novel
(Adobe EPUB eBook, Kindle Book, OverDrive Read)

Book Cover
Average Rating
5 star
 
(1)
4 star
 
(0)
3 star
 
(0)
2 star
 
(0)
1 star
 
(0)
Published:
Farrar, Straus and Giroux 2014
Status:
Available from OverDrive
Description

Edward St. Aubyn is "great at dissecting an entire social world" (Michael Chabon, Los Angeles Times)
Edward St. Aubyn's Patrick Melrose novels were some of the most celebrated works of fiction of the past decade. Ecstatic praise came from a wide range of admirers, from literary superstars such as Zadie Smith, Francine Prose, Jeffrey Eugenides, and Michael Chabon to pop-culture icons such as Anthony Bourdain and January Jones. Now St. Aubyn returns with a hilariously smart send-up of a certain major British literary award.
The judges on the panel of the Elysian Prize for Literature must get through hundreds of submissions to find the best book of the year. Meanwhile, a host of writers are desperate for Elysian attention: the brilliant writer and serial heartbreaker Katherine Burns; the lovelorn debut novelist Sam Black; and Bunjee, convinced that his magnum opus, The Mulberry Elephant, will take the literary world by storm. Things go terribly wrong when Katherine's publisher accidentally submits a cookery book in place of her novel; one of the judges finds himself in the middle of a scandal; and Bunjee, aghast to learn his book isn't on the short list, seeks revenge.
Lost for Words is a witty, fabulously entertaining satire that cuts to the quick of some of the deepest questions about the place of art in our celebrity-obsessed culture, and asks how we can ever hope to recognize real talent when everyone has an agenda.

Also in This Series
Formats
Adobe EPUB eBook
Works on all eReaders (except Kindles), desktop computers and mobile devices with reading apps installed.
Kindle Book
Works on Kindles and devices with a Kindle app installed.
OverDrive Read
Need Help?
If you are having problem transferring a title to your device, please fill out this support form or visit the library so we can help you to use our eBooks and eAudio Books.
More Like This
Other Editions and Formats
More Copies In LINK+
Loading LINK+ Copies...
More Details
Format:
Adobe EPUB eBook, Kindle Book, OverDrive Read
Street Date:
05/20/2014
Language:
English
ISBN:
9780374711481
ASIN:
B00GQ67W2Q
Reviews from GoodReads
Loading GoodReads Reviews.
Citations
APA Citation (style guide)

Edward St. Aubyn. (2014). Lost for Words: A Novel. Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation (style guide)

Edward St. Aubyn. 2014. Lost for Words: A Novel. Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities Citation (style guide)

Edward St. Aubyn, Lost for Words: A Novel. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2014.

MLA Citation (style guide)

Edward St. Aubyn. Lost for Words: A Novel. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2014.

Note! Citation formats are based on standards as of July 2022. Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy.
Copy Details
LibraryOwnedAvailable
Shared Digital Collection11
Staff View
Grouped Work ID:
c7c5b7d7-282d-c6d5-79dc-8fb03c68ecc8
Go To Grouped Work
Needs Update?:
No
Date Added:
Jun 12, 2018 19:03:38
Date Updated:
Nov 19, 2023 03:12:22
Last Metadata Check:
Apr 21, 2024 10:49:50
Last Metadata Change:
Nov 19, 2023 12:09:58
Last Availability Check:
Apr 21, 2024 10:49:54
Last Availability Change:
Mar 13, 2023 10:58:55
Last Grouped Work Modification Time:
Apr 27, 2024 02:10:59

OverDrive Product Record

images
    • cover:
        • href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-100/2390-1/{FE4B9277-420A-4453-8091-9B935B58E7BF}Img100.jpg
        • type: image/jpeg
    • thumbnail:
        • href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-200/2390-1/{FE4B9277-420A-4453-8091-9B935B58E7BF}Img200.jpg
        • type: image/jpeg
    • cover150Wide:
        • href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-150/2390-1/FE4/B92/77/{FE4B9277-420A-4453-8091-9B935B58E7BF}Img150.jpg
        • type: image/jpeg
    • cover300Wide:
        • href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-400/2390-1/FE4/B92/77/{FE4B9277-420A-4453-8091-9B935B58E7BF}Img400.jpg
        • type: image/jpeg
formats
      • identifiers:
            • type: ISBN
            • value: 9780374711481
      • name: Adobe EPUB eBook
      • id: ebook-epub-adobe
      • identifiers:
            • type: ASIN
            • value: B00GQ67W2Q
      • name: Kindle Book
      • id: ebook-kindle
      • identifiers:
            • type: ISBN
            • value: 9780374711481
      • name: OverDrive Read
      • id: ebook-overdrive
otherFormatIdentifiers
      • type: ISBN
      • value: 9780374280291
mediaType
eBook
primaryCreator
    • role: Author
    • name: Edward St. Aubyn
isOwnedByCollections
True
title
Lost for Words
dateAdded
2015-10-19T21:04:20.007Z
contentDetails
      • href: https://link.overdrive.com?websiteID=141&titleID=1474821
      • type: text/html
      • account:
          • name: Sacramento Public Library (CA)
          • id: 1151
sortTitle
Lost for Words A Novel
crossRefId
1474821
subtitle
A Novel
id
FE4B9277-420A-4453-8091-9B935B58E7BF
starRating
3.1

OverDrive MetaData

isPublicDomain
False
formats
      • fileName: LostforWords_9780374711481_1474821
      • partCount: 0
      • fileSize: 486281
      • identifiers:
            • type: ISBN
            • value: 9780374711481
      • rights:
            • type: Copying
            • value: 0
            • type: Printing
            • value: 0
            • type: Lending
            • value: 0
            • type: ReadAloud
            • value: 0
            • type: ExpirationRights
            • value: 0
      • name: Adobe EPUB eBook
      • isReadAlong: False
      • id: ebook-epub-adobe
      • onSaleDate: 5/20/2014
      • samples:
            • source: From the book
            • formatType: ebook-overdrive
            • url: https://samples.overdrive.com/lost-for-words-fe4b92?.epub-sample.overdrive.com
      • fileName: LostforWords_1474821
      • partCount: 0
      • fileSize: 0
      • identifiers:
            • type: ASIN
            • value: B00GQ67W2Q
      • name: Kindle Book
      • isReadAlong: False
      • id: ebook-kindle
      • onSaleDate: 5/20/2014
      • samples:
            • source: From the book
            • formatType: ebook-overdrive
            • url: https://samples.overdrive.com/lost-for-words-fe4b92?.epub-sample.overdrive.com
      • fileName: LostforWords_9780374711481_1474821
      • partCount: 0
      • fileSize: 0
      • identifiers:
            • type: ISBN
            • value: 9780374711481
      • name: OverDrive Read
      • isReadAlong: False
      • id: ebook-overdrive
      • onSaleDate: 5/20/2014
      • samples:
            • source: From the book
            • formatType: ebook-overdrive
            • url: https://samples.overdrive.com/lost-for-words-fe4b92?.epub-sample.overdrive.com
keywords
      • value: literary fiction
      • value: satire
      • value: English literature
      • value: British Literature
      • value: contemporary literature
      • value: humorous books
      • value: British authors
      • value: books about books
      • value: literary prizes
      • value: contemporary novels
      • value: funny novels
creators
      • role: Author
      • fileAs: St. Aubyn, Edward
      • bioText: Edward St. Aubyn was born in London. His acclaimed Patrick Melrose novels are Never Mind, Bad News, Some Hope, Mother's Milk (winner of the Prix Femina étranger and short-listed for the Man Booker Prize), and At Last. The series was made into a BAFTA Award–winning Sky Atlantic TV series starring Benedict Cumberbatch. St. Aubyn is also the author of A Clue to the Exit, On the Edge (short-listed for the Guardian Fiction Prize), Lost for Words (winner of the Bollinger Everyman Wodehouse Prize), and Dunbar, his reimagining of King Lear for the Hogarth Shakespeare project.
      • name: Edward St. Aubyn
publishDate
2014-05-20T00:00:00-04:00
isOwnedByCollections
True
title
Lost for Words
fullDescription

Edward St. Aubyn is "great at dissecting an entire social world" (Michael Chabon, Los Angeles Times)
Edward St. Aubyn's Patrick Melrose novels were some of the most celebrated works of fiction of the past decade. Ecstatic praise came from a wide range of admirers, from literary superstars such as Zadie Smith, Francine Prose, Jeffrey Eugenides, and Michael Chabon to pop-culture icons such as Anthony Bourdain and January Jones. Now St. Aubyn returns with a hilariously smart send-up of a certain major British literary award.
The judges on the panel of the Elysian Prize for Literature must get through hundreds of submissions to find the best book of the year. Meanwhile, a host of writers are desperate for Elysian attention: the brilliant writer and serial heartbreaker Katherine Burns; the lovelorn debut novelist Sam Black; and Bunjee, convinced that his magnum opus, The Mulberry Elephant, will take the literary world by storm. Things go terribly wrong when Katherine's publisher accidentally submits a cookery book in place of her novel; one of the judges finds himself in the middle of a scandal; and Bunjee, aghast to learn his book isn't on the short list, seeks revenge.
Lost for Words is a witty, fabulously entertaining satire that cuts to the quick of some of the deepest questions about the place of art in our celebrity-obsessed culture, and asks how we can ever hope to recognize real talent when everyone has an agenda.

reviews
      • premium: False
      • source: Anne Enright, New York Times Book Review
      • content:

        "Everything St. Aubyn writes is worth reading for the cleansing rancor of his intelligence and the fierce elegance of his prose..."

      • premium: False
      • source: Maddie Crum, Huffington Post
      • content: "Lost for Words is especially witty... a hilarious commentary on the dissonance between the daily lives of authors and how they are perceived publicly."
      • premium: False
      • source: Mikicho Kakutani, The New York Times
      • content: "Lost for Words is... a satirical romp that showcases... [St. Aubyn's] Waugh-like talent for comedy and his unsparing eye for people's pretensions and self-delusions."
      • premium: False
      • source: John Banville, The New York Review of Books
      • content: "Lost for Words... is an entertaining squib... [with] perfectly aimed satirical barbs."
      • premium: False
      • source: Esther Yi, Los Angeles Review of Books
      • content: "St. Aubyn... executes his irony with phlegmatic and tightly controlled prose, underneath which lurks the trenchant exasperation of a veteran."
      • premium: False
      • source: Jonathan Yardley
      • content: "Lost for Words is a withering satire... a deliciously irreverent novel."
      • premium: False
      • source: Brian Gallagher, The Seattle Times
      • content: "[D]eeply eloquent writing... St. Aubyn's mastery of language--and the resonance it can hew--can't help but come through."
      • premium: False
      • source: Jason Diamond, Flavorwire
      • content: "St. Aubyn's is a subtle, dry, and often dark type of humor... [he] once again skewers privilege in a humorous way."
      • premium: True
      • source: Publisher's Weekly
      • content:

        February 17, 2014
        The latest from St. Aubyn (the Patrick Melrose novels) marks a departure from his previous work. This comedic novel chronicles a year in the life of the Elysium Prize, a fictional Booker-like British literary award. The Elysium is mired in scandal and incompetence from the get-go: the underwriting funds come from a dubious agribusiness conglomerate, the judging panel is marginally qualified, and the process of selecting a shortlist is more about alliances and favors than quality. St. Aubyn inserts some amusing parodies in the early part of the novel, including selections from wot u starin at, a crude Scottish drug novel, as well as All the World’s a Stage, a dense historical work about Shakespeare. These surveyings of the terrain of Irvine Welsh, Hilary Mantel, and others are among the novel’s highlights. In addition to following the judges, St. Aubyn devotes chapters to several would-be nominees. Katherine is a rising literary star whose publisher accidentally submits a cookbook instead of her latest manuscript; Sonny is an Indian prince who takes the slighting of his self-published opus, The Mulberry Elephant, as a grave personal affront. St. Aubyn is clearly having fun with this material, and the book is breezy and propulsive. Still, the satire isn’t particularly deep, and none of the many characters in this short novel are featured long enough to make a lasting impression. A modest entertainment from a writer whose output had hitherto been uniformly exceptional.

      • premium: True
      • source: Kirkus
      • content:

        March 15, 2014
        And now for something completely different: a broad farce from a British novelist renowned for his literary subtlety and command of tone. Having finished his five-volume series of autobiographical Patrick Melrose novels (At Last, 2012, etc.), which have been hailed as one of the foremost achievements of modern literature, what could St. Aubyn do for an encore? Though a lethal sense of humor has been crucial to his skewering of the British upper classes, here he exchanges the darkness of hell and redemption among the coldhearted aristocracy for a laugh-out-loud sendup of literary prizes. Instead of the Man Booker, Britain's most prestigious award is the Elysian Prize for Literature, determined by one well-meaning academic and a motley assortment of philistines, sponsored by a "highly innovative but controversial agricultural company" whose chief critics are environmentalists "claiming that [its products] caused cancer, disrupted the food chain, destroyed bee populations, or turned cattle into cannibals." The judges for the prize generally have hidden (or not so hidden) agendas that don't require them to actually read the books, and one doesn't even bother to attend their deliberative sessions (he's an actor on tour with "a hip-hop adaptation of Waiting for Godot"). The plot pivots around the promiscuity of a nubile novelist who has "averaged twenty lovers a year since she was sixteen" and who is in the process of juggling three or more through most of the narrative. Both the author and the reader have great fun with this, as the virtuosic novelist provides excerpts from nominated works, including a historical novel about William Shakespeare, a pulp page-turner and a scabrous (and hilarious) spew that the highest-minded judge dismisses as "sub-Irvine Welsh." Through preposterous plot machinations, a cookbook of traditional Indian recipes is mistakenly submitted as fiction and becomes an unlikely contender, "operating as the boldest metafictional performance of our time." The madcap climax involves an assassination plot and a stuck elevator at the awards banquet before surprisingly resolving itself with a (tentative) happy ending. Like a long Monty Python sketch.

        COPYRIGHT(2014) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

      • premium: True
      • source: Library Journal
      • content:

        February 15, 2014

        As literary awards go, there couldn't be a more unlikely collection of judges, authors, publishers, and publicists than the one assembled for the Elysian Prize, a fiction award standing in for the real-life Man Booker Prize. The committee, chaired by former MP Malcolm Craig and made up of a self-important group of writers, academics, and actors, set themselves the task of finding works of fiction with social relevance, geographic representation, and political correctness. With no intention of actually reading most of the cringe-worthy submissions, each member champions the one book he or she has glanced at, the most improbable of which is The Palace Cookbook, an assemblage of recipes and anecdotes from India submitted accidentally by a careless publisher instead of the serious novel that should have been sent. The fun begins when the delusional nephew of the cookbook author sets out for murderous revenge after his own self-published tome has been overlooked. VERDICT For anyone who wonders about the process of judging literary awards, this fast and funny lark from the author of the notable Patrick Melrose novels may shed some comedic light. [See Prepub Alert, 12/7/13.]--Barbara Love, Kingston Frontenac P.L., Ont.

        Copyright 2014 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

      • premium: True
      • source: Booklist
      • content:

        April 1, 2014
        Malcolm Craig becomes chair of the board awarding his country's top literary honor, the Elysian Prize. In describing what ensues, noted British novelist St. Aubyn takes on the publishing industry and the horse-trading and ax-grinding among authors, critics, and hangers-on surrounding such awards, including the popular (and promiscuous) Katherine Burns, whose novel is overlooked in favor of a cookbook mistakenly sent for consideration by its publisher; interpreted by some as a new form of modern fiction, it makes the short list. Not wanting to read much himself, Craig is joined by judges Jo Cross (whose major criterion is relevance ), Vanessa Shaw ( good writing ), Penny Feathers (former mistress of the elderly corporate sponsor), and actor Tobias Benedict. Young writers were the future, Craig muses, or would be if they were still around and being published. As a novel about the ephemeral nature of book awards, Lost for Words may itself be ephemeral, but along the way, St. Aubyn offers a hearty satire, full of laughs and groans, with snippets from the candidates, including the novel wot u starin at, an unsparing look at Glasgow low life, which bookies (the gambling kind) make the favorite.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2014, American Library Association.)

popularity
58
links
    • self:
        • href: https://api.overdrive.com/v1/collections/v1L1BWwAAAA2I/products/fe4b9277-420a-4453-8091-9b935b58e7bf/metadata
        • type: application/vnd.overdrive.api+json
id
fe4b9277-420a-4453-8091-9b935b58e7bf
starRating
3.1
images
    • cover:
        • href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-100/2390-1/{FE4B9277-420A-4453-8091-9B935B58E7BF}Img100.jpg
        • type: image/jpeg
    • thumbnail:
        • href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-200/2390-1/{FE4B9277-420A-4453-8091-9B935B58E7BF}Img200.jpg
        • type: image/jpeg
    • cover150Wide:
        • href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-150/2390-1/FE4/B92/77/{FE4B9277-420A-4453-8091-9B935B58E7BF}Img150.jpg
        • type: image/jpeg
    • cover300Wide:
        • href: https://img1.od-cdn.com/ImageType-400/2390-1/FE4/B92/77/{FE4B9277-420A-4453-8091-9B935B58E7BF}Img400.jpg
        • type: image/jpeg
isPublicPerformanceAllowed
False
languages
      • code: en
      • name: English
subjects
      • value: Fiction
      • value: Literature
publishDateText
05/20/2014
otherFormatIdentifiers
      • type: ISBN
      • value: 9780374280291
mediaType
eBook
shortDescription

Edward St. Aubyn is "great at dissecting an entire social world" (Michael Chabon, Los Angeles Times)
Edward St. Aubyn's Patrick Melrose novels were some of the most celebrated works of fiction of the past decade. Ecstatic praise came from a wide range of admirers, from literary superstars such as Zadie Smith, Francine Prose, Jeffrey Eugenides, and Michael Chabon to pop-culture icons such as Anthony Bourdain and January Jones. Now St. Aubyn returns with a hilariously smart send-up of a certain major British literary award.
The judges on the panel of the Elysian Prize for Literature must get through hundreds of submissions to find the best book of the year. Meanwhile, a host of writers are desperate for Elysian attention: the brilliant writer and serial heartbreaker Katherine Burns; the lovelorn debut novelist Sam Black; and Bunjee, convinced that his magnum opus, The Mulberry Elephant, will take the literary world by storm. Things go terribly wrong...

sortTitle
Lost for Words A Novel
crossRefId
1474821
subtitle
A Novel
publisher
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
bisacCodes
      • code: FIC019000
      • description: Fiction / Literary
      • code: FIC052000
      • description: Fiction / Satire
      • code: FIC098060
      • description: Fiction / World Literature / England / 21st Century