Metacritic Books

Beyond Black
by Hilary Mantel

ISBN: 0805073566
Henry Holt and Co., 384 pages, $26.00
Fiction General Literature & Fiction
Released 05/09/2005

Mantel injects her usual dark humor into this look at the mundane, quotidian world of ordinary working folk--well, ordinary working clairvoyants, that is.

Overall Metascore

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

75 / 100

Critic Reviews

Outstanding Kirkus Reviews
Superbly odd, but still superb.
Outstanding London Review Of Books Elizabeth Lowry
Beyond Black is, magnificently, a book of stresses and counter-stresses, establishing riveting oppositions between spirit and body, fear and love, despair and hope, male and female, self-denial and self-indulgence. And, of course, evil and good, damnation and redemption.
Outstanding The Independent Jill Dawson
Laceratingly observant, a masterpiece of wit, heavy with atmosphere. It is also glorious, insolent and slyly funny: full of robust, uncluttered prose and searing moments.
Outstanding The New York Times Book Review Terrence Rafferty
This is, I think, a great comic novel. Hilary Mantel's humor, like Flannery O'Connor's, is so far beyond black it becomes a kind of light.
Outstanding The New Yorker Joan Acocella
Mantel's writing is so exact and brilliant that, in itself, it seems an act of survival, even redemption.
Favorable Washington Post Meg Wolitzer
A daring and extravagant book, filled with as much wit as darkness. Sometimes, wit can't really replace light, and I found myself longing once in a while for the novel to take a sudden sharp turn and leave the paranormal and the traumatic far, far behind. I never got my wish, of course, which is probably just as well.
Favorable The Spectator D. J. Taylor
All this is done with a kind of amused savagery — always latent in Mantel’s earlier work, only now, it seems, allowed the space to luxuriate and develop — which relies for its sharpest effects on the thoroughly prosaic nature of her material.
Favorable The Independent Nicola Smyth
Black humour is Mantel's trademark, and, as its title acknowledges, she's at her bleakest here.
Favorable Publishers Weekly
This witty, matter-of-fact look at the psychic milieu reveals a supernatural world that can be as mundane as the world of carpet salesmen and shopkeepers.
Favorable San Francisco Chronicle Jesse Berrett
Floating two sets of narrative balls at once, Mantel masterfully spikes her sardonic take on contemporary supernaturalism with a raw cruelty that never needs updating.
Favorable The Guardian Fay Weldon
She's witty, ironic, intelligent and, I suspect, haunted. This is a book out of the unconscious, where the best novels come from.
Favorable Boston Globe Richard Eder
Almost disagreeably, almost against our will, we are sunk into an unremitting painfulness that is relieved -- but also intensified -- by jolts of outraged tenderness and outrageous exhilaration.
Favorable Daily Telegraph Ruth Scurr
It is Mantel's compassion for the ordinary people who live and die in such unlovely places that illuminates this dark book and creates its black lustre.
Favorable TLS: The Times Literary Supplement M. John Harrison
Savage, startlingly subversive and raucously funny novel.
Mixed Library Journal Eleanor J. Bader
While readers unschooled in the wiles of psychic phenomenon will likely find parts of this novel tedious, Alison and her intrepid business partner, Colette, are so interestingly quirky that even when the novel veers into New Age babble it retains some appeal. [1 Apr 2005, p.87]
Mixed The Globe And Mail [Toronto] Bernard Kelly
As good as all this is, less would have been even better. Beyond Black is never quite "of an unfeasible size," but it does sag noticeably in the middle.
Mixed New York Review Of Books John Banville
Beyond Black is a fine work, and from a lesser novelist would have seemed a masterpiece. It is too long -- Muriel Spark would have managed the same effect in a hundred or so crisp pages -- and despite the self-deprecating humor it shows too overtly its grand intentions.
Unfavorable Village Voice Rachel Aviv
The dead people in Mantel's latest are tacky and clueless and live in dusty parts of kitchens and bathrooms.

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