Michel Houellebecq is a novelist, poet and essayist, as well as an occasional actor, filmmaker and singer. Acclaimed both in his native France and worldwide, his novels include Atomised, Platform, The Map and the Territory and Submission.
The most interesting novelist of our times * Evening Standard * Michel Houellebecq’s new book proves he is one of the world’s greatest novelists . . . He writes superbly . . . In England . . . we have no one, male or female, to match Houellebecq * The Daily Telegraph * Surely the most important novelist to have been publishing not only in France but in all of Europe over the past three decades. -- David Sexton, <i>The Sunday Times</i> A compassionate, deeply affecting novel about love and death and the way we treat the dying . . . worthy of Balzac . . . telling truths that come straight from Pascal. We can only hope that it is not Houellebecq’s swansong, after all * The Spectator * A novel by Michel Houellebecq isn’t just a literary event; it’s news. I can’t think of any other French novelist who’s a must-read here; in fact I can’t think of a contemporary novelist anywhere whose work reflects the mood of the times so acutely he seems to anticipate events; or any other writer who is so willing to show us the world as he sees it, not as we’d like it to be -- Melanie McDonagh, <i>Evening Standard</i> An extended meditation on human frailty and the lack of spirituality in the Western world . . . Houellebecq displays compassion and empathy, and a belief in the redemptive power of love. * The New Statesman * Annihilation leans neither towards hope nor despair, but towards a transcendent serenity – an eerie peace that arises, as everything arises in this novel, in the space to which warring forces give shape * The Guardian * Since the start of his literary career, Michel Houellebecq has been viewed in France as a prodigy whom his readers and critics both love hating and hate loving. As well as a bestselling novelist, he has become a social phenomenon: a rock star, a freak, a visionary genius, a political agitator, even, for some, a prophet. * The Times Literary Supplement * Houellebecq teases and confuses our moral compass, as any good novelist should . . . Annihilation harbours moments of incredible beauty. -- Camilla Grudova, <i>The Daily Telegraph</i> A shattering read. But it's a truly powerful one too, and about much more than the grim picture of French society for which its brilliant author is mostly known * The Big Issue *