Jonathan Lee's first novel, Who is Mr Satoshi?, was nominated for the Desmond Elliott Prize and shortlisted for an MJA Open Book Award in 2011. His second novel, Joy, published in 2013, was shortlisted for the Encore Award. The BBC's Culture Show programme recently featured him as being one of Britain's 'best new novelists'. He lives in New York.
Lee has crafted an absorbing character piece that feels startlingly real. Even though the dread of the looming disaster is always there, the main characters' stories are given plenty of room to breathe and their mundane struggles with everyday life are extremely relatable. High Dive is funny, troublesome and poignant, and will cement Lee's reputation. * Herald * Lee masterfully ekes poetry out of everyday life...As a character study High Dive is faultless. Freya, Moose and Dan exist, you know them, they are gloriously and fully realized. * Stylist * High Dive is a fascinating look into a troubled past. In taut scene after taut scene, with a fine style and wit among the carnage, Jonathan Lee does service to history and the novel both. -- Joshua Ferris, author of Then We Came to the End Novels about terrorism aren't usually this tender. It's Lee's way of bringing home the cost of bloodshed ... A tragi-comic tale full of warmth and muddled humanity. * Metro * Engrossing ... Effortlessly switching between Belfast and Brighton in stylist prose that perfectly captures the tension and tenor of the times, it's highly recommended. * Mail on Sunday * The novel is full of gentle humour: its tones are mostly warm and compassionate...High Dive is a moving and charismatic novel...It succeeds, through its multiple sympathies and scrupulous empathy, on its own terms * Financial Times * High Dive is a novel so smart and compassionate and beautifully written that it asks for total immersion. A reader will hold her breath for long, perfectly-paced stretches, and she will surface, dizzied, at the end. -- Lauren Groff, author of Fates and Furies Devastating ... Inspired ... We make so many complex emotional investments in the lives of Lee's characters that it takes a monk's restraint not to flip to the very end of the book before you get there. * New York Times * Hauntingly atmospheric ... Lee is quite brilliant at excavating the disappointment of characters constantly chasing lost opportunities. * Guardian * Achingly good ... on a par with Martin Amis ... In High Dive, the ticktock means more than the boom... The novel's last, almost whispered word about the bombing's carnage is left to stand among the most devastating observations ever made about terrorism: Someone had considered this fair . It is Jonathan Lee's great achievement to have written, on this of all subjects, one of the gentlest novels in memory. * The New Yorker * An ingenious and original mixture of the domestic and the political, set in the days leading up to the Brighton bombing of 1984. At its heart is a father-and-daughter relationship that feels uncannily real and wonderfully touching. -- David Nicholls * Observer, Summer Reads * Jonathan Lee [is] a wordsmith of incomparable eloquence...High Dive is a work of serious and thoughtful integrity. * Independent * Achingly good ... Satisfyingly tricky when it comes to speeding up and slowing down, keeping readers off balance, teasing them about when what's already irrevocable is actually going to happen ... At his best - and he is at it often - Lee displays a nimble metaphysical wit and a verbal ingenuity on a par with Martin Amis ... In High Dive, the ticktock means more than the boom... The novel's last, almost whispered word about the bombing's carnage is left to stand among the most devastating observations ever made about terrorism: Someone had considered this fair . It is Jonathan Lee's great achievement to have written, on this of all subjects, one of the gentlest novels in memory. * The New Yorker * High Dive did for the Brighton bombings what Garth Risk Hallberg's overhyped City on Fire attempted to do for the New York City blackout - it's a multivoiced epic that builds towards a stunning finale. I loved it. -- Alex Preston * Observer - Best Novels of 2015 * Lee's powerful novel is an extraordinary performance: vividly written, painfully human and fully fleshing the inner lives of its characters. * Sunday Times *