
A Sport and a Pastime by James Salter
The seductive classic that established Salters reputation as one of the finest prose writers of our time.
A great literary novel but also the most erotic book ever written -- Jonathan Dee * Financial Times *
A Sport and a Pastime. . Slender, cynical and bruisingly sexy, the novel represents the first full flowering of [Salter’s] mature style; his exquisite sentences and extraordinary evocation of place * The Daily Telegraph *
Now deemed canonical . . . A Sport and a Pastime [is] still one of the most intensely honest books about sexual passion * The Sunday Times *
A tour de force of erotic realism, a romantic cliffhanger * The New York Times *
He has written three books that everyone should read before they die: A Sport and a Pastime, Light Years, and his recollections, Burning the Days * The Independent *
Two of his previous novels [including] A Sport and a Pastime, from 1967, are regarded as classics . . . The writer Reynolds Price also thought A Sport and a Pastime ”perfect” * The Irish Times *
One of the finest American writers of his mighty generation * Esquire *
He has written three books that everyone should read before they die: A Sport and a Pastime, Light Years and his recollections, Burning the Days * Independent *
Salter is the contemporary writer most admired and envied by other writers . . . He can, when he wants, break your heart with a sentence * Washington Post *
A Sport and a Pastime is as nearly perfect as any American fiction I know -- Reynolds Price
James Salter's writing has always provoked in me a kind of evangelical admiration. It is sheer brute magic. His prose is exquisite, sentences created with such acuity and efficacy it seems he re-forges language itself, makes it more purposeful and beautiful -- Sarah Hall
Robert Frost said that the hope of any poet is to lodge a few poems so deep they couldn't be dislodged, and James Salter has done that again and again. He has become an indelible presence in our literature -- Tobias Wolff * Observer *
To read Salter's work is always to embark on a journey through a life lived - the beautiful and the colourless, the tragic and the sustaining . . . exceptional fiction that cuts to our most cherished and at times most private truths. Read him when you can, his novels about sex and flying and war and love - those moments that should outshine all others - and your own world, your own moments worth remembering will appear all the brighter for it * GQ *
A Sport and a Pastime. . Slender, cynical and bruisingly sexy, the novel represents the first full flowering of [Salter’s] mature style; his exquisite sentences and extraordinary evocation of place * The Daily Telegraph *
Now deemed canonical . . . A Sport and a Pastime [is] still one of the most intensely honest books about sexual passion * The Sunday Times *
A tour de force of erotic realism, a romantic cliffhanger * The New York Times *
He has written three books that everyone should read before they die: A Sport and a Pastime, Light Years, and his recollections, Burning the Days * The Independent *
Two of his previous novels [including] A Sport and a Pastime, from 1967, are regarded as classics . . . The writer Reynolds Price also thought A Sport and a Pastime ”perfect” * The Irish Times *
One of the finest American writers of his mighty generation * Esquire *
He has written three books that everyone should read before they die: A Sport and a Pastime, Light Years and his recollections, Burning the Days * Independent *
Salter is the contemporary writer most admired and envied by other writers . . . He can, when he wants, break your heart with a sentence * Washington Post *
A Sport and a Pastime is as nearly perfect as any American fiction I know -- Reynolds Price
James Salter's writing has always provoked in me a kind of evangelical admiration. It is sheer brute magic. His prose is exquisite, sentences created with such acuity and efficacy it seems he re-forges language itself, makes it more purposeful and beautiful -- Sarah Hall
Robert Frost said that the hope of any poet is to lodge a few poems so deep they couldn't be dislodged, and James Salter has done that again and again. He has become an indelible presence in our literature -- Tobias Wolff * Observer *
To read Salter's work is always to embark on a journey through a life lived - the beautiful and the colourless, the tragic and the sustaining . . . exceptional fiction that cuts to our most cherished and at times most private truths. Read him when you can, his novels about sex and flying and war and love - those moments that should outshine all others - and your own world, your own moments worth remembering will appear all the brighter for it * GQ *
James Salter is the author of the novels Solo Faces, Light Years, A Sport and a Pastime, The Arm of Flesh (revised as Cassada), The Hunters and All That Is; the memoirs Gods of Tin and Burning the Days; and two collections of short stories, Dusk and Other Stories (which won the 1989 PEN/Faulkner Award), and Last Night. He died in 2015 at the age of ninety.
| SKU | Unavailable |
| ISBN 13 | 9781035063734 |
| ISBN 10 | 1035063735 |
| Title | A Sport and a Pastime |
| Author | James Salter |
| Series | Picador Collection |
| Condition | Unavailable |
| Binding Type | Paperback |
| Publisher | Pan Macmillan |
| Year published | 2025-09-04 |
| Number of pages | 208 |
| Cover note | Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary. |
| Note | Unavailable |