Metacritic Books

Restless
by William Boyd

ISBN: 1596912367
Bloomsbury, 352 pages, $24.95
Fiction General Literature & Fiction, Mystery & Thrillers
Released 10/2006

The author's ninth novel combines family drama, a mystery, and (through flashbacks) some WWII espionage, all resulting when a woman discovers that her aging mother was once a British spy.

Overall Metascore

This is an average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

71 / 100

Critic Reviews

Outstanding Boston Globe Richard Eder
Brilliantly twisted plotting.
Outstanding Chicago Tribune Alan Cheuse
Restless is superbly written, has a hypnotic plot that unfolds in an intellectually interesting fashion, gives us compelling characters whose psychic twists and turns make them seem both real and fascinating, sets marvelous scenes in two time periods...and combines all of these elements into one of the most smoothly readable novels of the year.
Outstanding San Francisco Chronicle Timothy Peters
But an effective plot isn't the only element that commands attention; the quality of Boyd's prose and the insight he brings to the story make "Restless" resonate.
Outstanding The Guardian Marianne MacDonald
This is one of the better novels you'll pick up this year and will keep you turning pages until the end.
Outstanding The Guardian Helen Dunmore
Restless is enormously readable in every respect: a confident, intelligent, ambitious novel.
Outstanding The Globe And Mail [Toronto] Gale Zoe Garnett
A rich ointment, Restless is a wonderful and addictive book that successfully brings William Boyd into the exalted territory of Graham Greene and John le Carre. [30 Sept 2006, p.D12]
Favorable Sydney Morning Herald James Bradley
An easy book to enjoy but a difficult book to admire. Despite its professed interest in betrayal and treachery, it has surprisingly little to say about either...But Restless is almost embarrassingly entertaining.
Favorable Washington Post John Dalton
Restless is a gripping and smartly crafted spy thriller set against a fascinating and largely hidden episode in U.S.-British relations. By this measure, the book is an absorbing success.
Favorable The New Yorker
An absorbing historical thriller.
Favorable The Independent David Mattin
Restless is that rare thing: a spy thriller from a first-rate narrative intelligence.
Favorable The New York Times Book Review Ben Macintyre
Boyd has written a crackling spy thriller, but more than that, he has evoked the atmosphere of wartime espionage: the clubby, grubby moral accommodations, the paranoia, the tense sexuality.
Favorable Daily Telegraph Tibor Fischer
Chapter by chapter, Boyd relentlessly pumps up the suspense, but as is often the case with books where you're persistently promised a titanic revelation at the end, I found the denouement a little unconvincing, especially compared with the verisimilitude of the preceding chapters.
Favorable LA Weekly Brendan Bernhard
As an exercise in genre, Restless brings a fascinating, shadowy sliver of history to light, and the movie’s likely to be pretty good too.
Favorable Publishers Weekly
This fascinating story is well told, but slightly undercut by Ruth's less-than-dramatic life as a single mother teaching English at Oxford while pursuing a graduate degree in history. [21 Aug 2006, p.49]
Mixed Booklist Connie Fletcher
A somewhat clumsy narrative enlivened by some expertly generated suspense. [1 Aug 2006, p.48]
Mixed Kirkus Reviews
Boyd skillfully manipulates language as easily as Eva does. He handles the plot more roughly. Ruth is clumsy albeit untrained, and the other characters in her world are rather thinly sketched. [15 June 2006, p.589]
Mixed The Spectator William Brett
In Restless, he has dared to write half a novel as a female spy, and half as her pretentious daughter. Unfortunately, Ruth's story is not meaty enough to allow the reader to forgive her quietly irritating patter. [16 Sept 2006]
Mixed Library Journal Ron Terpening
While some readers may be annoyed by the author's stylistic tics, particularly the profusion of paired adverbs (e.g., people speak "seriously, weightily" and shrug "hopelessly, helplessly"), others will enjoy this glimpse of wartime dirty tricks. [1 Sept 2006, p.134]
Mixed The Observer Siddhartha Deb
Restless takes its storytelling duties seriously, presenting us with a struggle that is often as captivating as a good game of chess. If it still feels inconsequential, one can’t help wondering if that says more about the present than it does about the past.
Mixed Wall Street Journal Daniel Akst
An enjoyable read, if a little workmanlike.
Mixed Los Angeles Times Scott Martelle
Although Boyd, a deft and stylish storyteller, has delivered an enjoyable read, a skein of loose threads leaves a nagging sense of unfinished business.
Mixed Daily Telegraph Will Cohu
Restless brushes up against some intriguing subjects, teasing us with the fiction behind historical certainties – that "special relationship" with America – but it does not pause to explore things.
Unfavorable The Independent Patrick Gale
It cannot have been cheap for Bloomsbury to lure Boyd away from Penguin; they could surely have afforded an editor with sufficient courage to tell him that the acquisition needed another draft.

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