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All That Man Is Paperback – October 3, 2017

4.0 out of 5 stars 2,587 ratings

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Finalist for the 2016 Man Booker Prize
Winner of the 2016
Paris Review Plimpton Prize for Fiction

A magnificent and ambitiously conceived portrait of contemporary life, by a genius of realism

All That Man Is
traces the arc of life from the spring of youth to the winter of old age by following nine men who range from the working-class ex-grunt to the pompous college student, the middle-aged loser to the Russian oligarch. Ludicrous and inarticulate, shocking and despicable, vital, pitiable, and hilarious, these men paint a picture of modern manhood. David Szalay is a master of a new kind of realism that vibrates with detail, intelligence, relevance, and devastating pathos. In All That Man Is, a Man Booker Prize finalist and the winner of the Gordon Burn Prize and the Plimpton Prize, he brilliantly illuminates the physical and emotional terrain of an increasingly globalized Europe.

“Szalay’s prose . . . is frequently brilliant, remarkable for its grace and economy . . . [
All That Man Is] has a new urgency now that the post-Cold War dream of a Europe of open borders and broad, shared identity has come under increasing question.” ―Garth Greenwell, The New York Times Book Review

“Szalay does so much and so well that we come to view his snapshots of lives as brilliant, captivating dramas.” ―
Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

“A 100-megawatt novel: intelligent, intricate, so very well made, the form perfectly fitting the content. When I reached the end, I turned straight back to the start to begin again.” ―
The Sunday Times (London)

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“David Szalay writes with voluptuous authority. He possesses voice rather than merely style, and you climb into his new novel, All That Man Is, as if into an understated luxury car. The book has a large, hammerlike engine, yet it is content to purr. There’s a sense of enormous power held in reserve. . . . He is an exceedingly gifted [writer] who can move in any direction he wishes. . . . Mr. Szalay’s prose is exacting without being fussy. . . . Mr. Szalay’s own stream of perception never falters in its sensitivity and probity. This book is a demonstration of uncommon power. It is a bummer, and it is beautiful.”The New York Times

“Szalay's prose. . . is frequently brilliant, remarkable for its grace and economy. He has a minimalist's gift for the quick sketch, whether of landscapes or human relationships. He studs his pages with sometimes startlingly lovely images. . . . [
All That Man Is] has a new urgency now that the post-Cold War dream of a Europe of open borders and broad, shared identity has come under increasing question.”―Garth Greenwell, The New York Times Book Review

"[David Szalay] has an admirable fearlessness for swiftly entering invented fictional worlds. . . . In canny, broad strokes, full of intelligently managed detail, each story funds its new fictional enterprise, as if he were calling out, each time, 'Where do you want to go? Poland? Copenhagen? Málaga? Berlin? I can do them all. Let’s go.' . . . His book is also bracingly unsentimental about male desire and male failure. . . . Intensely readable. . . . After several hundred pages of great brilliance and brutal simplicity, here at last is a deeper picture of all that man is, or all that he might be."
―James Wood, The New Yorker

“Szalay does so much and so well that we come to view his snapshots of lives as brilliant, captivating dramas."
Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

“These closely observed, untitled accounts are unnerving and compelling, and have a haunting cumulative effect. . . . Though we know them each briefly, these men are so authentic ― and, frequently, so hapless ― that they earn our sympathy. . . . In this remarkable book, Szalay pursues an essential truth, important to recognize in our globalizing times: The geographies change, yet the self remains. Whoever and however old a man is, he must face his life. And live it.”
San Francisco Chronicle

“Blending the personal, often plainly repressed nature of these men’s experiences with Szalay’s minimalist, red-eyed observations of the textures of 21st-century Europe, the novel reads like what Hemingway might have called
In Our Time had he written it 90 years later.”Los Angeles Review of Books

“Novels have chapters and stories are gathered into collections, but
All That Man Is looks to hover between the two, and blurring or disturbing that distinction is precisely what this book is about. . . . All That Man Is uses its own peculiar shape to define both the variety and unity of its characters’ collective life. It’s a book to go on with, the kind that makes a career worth watching.” New York Review of Books

“Szalay is a sophisticated, well-travelled writer with a sharp eye for the self-deceived, the ambitious, and the maimed. His gift, as has been noted by many reviewers, is that he can dissect his characters but never lose respect for them. As blind or guilty, callow or brutal as they are, their creator finds their dignity. . . . [His] characters don’t expect transcendence in this world: rather they nose up against desires that work like distorting mirrors, ones that bend in reflection to questioning gazes. There are extraordinary moments, epiphanies, to use again an over-used term, that make real the condition that man is in.”
Commonweal Magazine

“Szalay’s scenes are deftly conceived, and imbue a quiet, delicate elegance. . . . [He] paints a bleak picture of
All That Man Is, but there is art in the telling.”Electric Literature

“A unique, challenging book that tells their stories from youngest to oldest, it is a fascinating and sometimes disturbing look at common experiences between different classes and what it means to be a man in the modern world.”
BookRiot

“Without exception, the stories―subtle, seductive, poignant, humorous―bear witness to the alienation, self-doubt, and fragmentation of contemporary life; each succeeds on its own while complementing the others. Szalay’s riveting prose and his consummate command of structure illuminate the individual while exploring society’s unsettling complexity. In 2013, Szalay was named as one of
Granta’s Best of Young British Novelists. This effort exceeds even that lofty expectation.”Publishers Weekly, starred review

“A tightly woven, precisely observed novel in stories. . . . The book's conceit is imaginative, its architecture impressive. . . . Szalay writes with subtlety and pathos about these flawed and floundering figures. . . . A grim but compelling composite portrait by a talented writer.”
Kirkus Reviews

“[Szalay’s approach] largely eschews fashionable depictions of the predatory male psyche in favour of a more nuanced presentation that does not deny the avaricious or unattractive aspects of men, but also displays an empathetic understanding of human fallibility and longing. The men who populate Szalay’s fiction are often arrogant and self-aggrandizing, but their attitudes are rooted in a deep existential dread and, finally, an abiding and unavoidable sadness.”
The Globe and Mail (Canada)

“An astute an entertaining survey of the state of the modern European male. . . . Existential unease made enjoyable, insightful and all too recognisable.”
Financial Times (UK), Summer Books 2016

“[David Szalay] is capable of conjuring tenderness from any situation. . . . [Readers] will find a great deal to enjoy in these pages, and further evidence that Szalay. . . is one of the best fortysomething writers we have.”
The Guardian (UK)

“Cleverly conceived, authoritative, timely and (in a good way) crushing. . . . There is a cheerful and ghastly sordidness to everything, and Szalay’s prose with its ruthlessly banal dialogue, arm-twisting present tense, shard-like fragments, and every other page or so an irresistibly brilliant epithet or startlingly quotable phrase, lets nothing go to waste.”
―London Review of Books (UK)

“Each story grips the reader by the throat. We fully inhabit their progression of heroes and finally face the dreadful truth of the human condition: that nothing is eternal, not us, not our children, the human race, the Earth nor the stars. Rarely has it been so brilliantly and chillingly spelled out.”
Daily Mail (UK)

“Profound, sometimes moving and often blackly comic,
All That Man Is delights even as it unsettles. It’s another bravura performance from Szalay.”The National (UK)

“Szalay . . . brings a wide range of skills to bear. . . . A tour-de-force.”
Financial Times (UK)

“Nobody captures the super-sadness of modern Europe as well as Szalay. . . . The predicaments of the various tormented men come together to produce a rich exploration of male vulnerability. . . . With All That Man Is, [Szalay] emerges as a writer with a voice unlike any other.”
―The Spectator (UK)

“Original, piercingly acute and disturbingly, viscerally elegiac.”
―William Boyd

“Szalay’s writing is exact and true and always subtly intelligent; this book is bracing and thrilling and chilling.”
―Tessa Hadley

About the Author

David Szalay was born in Canada in 1974. His first novel, London and the South-East, won the Betty Trask Prize and the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize. His second novel, The Innocent, was published by Jonathan Cape in 2009. He lives in London.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Graywolf; Reprint edition (October 3, 2017)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 376 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1555977901
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1555977900
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.57 x 0.84 x 8.23 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.0 out of 5 stars 2,587 ratings

About the author

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David Szalay
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David Szalay is the author of novels including "London and the South-East", for which he was awarded the Betty Trask and Geoffrey Faber Memorial prizes, "All That Man Is", for which he was awarded the Gordon Burn prize and Plimpton Prize for Fiction, and shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize, and "Turbulence", which won the Edge Hill Prize. His most recent work is "Flesh", published in March 2025. Born in Canada, he grew up in London, and now lives in Vienna. His work has been translated into more than twenty languages.

Customer reviews

4 out of 5 stars
2,587 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers praise the book's writing quality, describing it as masterfully crafted with engrossing stories. Moreover, they appreciate the character development, particularly the interesting portrayal of male characters, and find it insightful, with one review noting it provides great insight into the inner lives of men. However, the book receives mixed reactions - while some find it a great read, others describe it as depressing and not particularly attractive.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

36 customers mention "Writing quality"30 positive6 negative

Customers praise the writing quality of the book, describing it as an engrossing and masterfully crafted story, with one customer noting how the words chosen and assembled go beyond mere description.

"...These characters are well-drawn and each will likely remind the reader of someone they know or have heard about...." Read more

"...And then, yes, the writing is truly brilliant. Only a consummate writer could come up with such an infinite variety of morbid states of mind...." Read more

"...The good - the characters are beautifully developed. The prose flows nicely and you do want to read through it...." Read more

"...Nevertheless, this is a fantasic book: well written, thought provoking and very much worth the read." Read more

19 customers mention "Readability"15 positive4 negative

Customers find the book to be a great read, with several mentioning they loved certain sections, and one describing it as absorbing.

"...This is a serious book that should lead to an examination of one's own life." Read more

"...The prose flows nicely and you do want to read through it. The scenes make you experience intimately what is going on...." Read more

"...this is a fantasic book: well written, thought provoking and very much worth the read." Read more

"...Definitely worth reading." Read more

16 customers mention "Story quality"12 positive4 negative

Customers enjoy the story quality of the book, describing it as a collection of narratives that provide interesting insights and themes, with one customer noting how the scenes make readers experience events intimately.

"This book is actually a series of short stories, each pertaining to different men at different stages in their lives...." Read more

"...The scenes make you experience intimately what is going on. You associate with the feelings of the characters...." Read more

"...Nevertheless, this is a fantasic book: well written, thought provoking and very much worth the read." Read more

"...The rest are variations on this theme. Each story doesn't really have an ending, let alone a happy ending...." Read more

10 customers mention "Character development"7 positive3 negative

Customers appreciate the character development in the book, particularly the interesting insights into male characters, with one customer noting how the story is told from a deeply male perspective.

"...The good - the characters are beautifully developed. The prose flows nicely and you do want to read through it...." Read more

"This book reflected original thinking, characters in whom one could become interested, and good writing...." Read more

"...The characters are real and the writing generally interesting...." Read more

"...The common theme is that these characters are isolated and lonely...." Read more

7 customers mention "Insight"7 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's psychological depth, with one review highlighting its exploration of the inner lives of men and its meditation on the human condition in modern times, while another describes it as dense with feeling and intelligence.

"...uses a range of voices/stories to reflect some of the multiple facets of being human, as well as of being a man. Definitely worth reading." Read more

"A well written and insightful but gloomy book as each character sketched has a bad case of "existential funk" ...." Read more

"Great writing and great insight into the inner lives of men at various stages of their lives. Heartbreaking." Read more

"...It impressed me and touched me and I have recommended it to many friends." Read more

14 customers mention "Depressing content"3 positive11 negative

Customers find the book's content depressing, with multiple reviews noting its cynical tone and gloomy atmosphere.

"...The common theme is that these characters are isolated and lonely...." Read more

"...As the stories progress, the mood getes darker and darker and the last three stories in particular, are quite depressing!..." Read more

"...unrelated stories, the collective sum of which is desperately and revealingly sad." Read more

"...The words chosen and assembled do not just describe, but create an intensity of mood, not on the page, but inside of you." Read more

3 customers mention "Attractiveness"0 positive3 negative

Customers find the book unappealing.

"...As others have written, the women are by and large not terribly attractive, the settings filthy and the men themselves troubled by their lives,..." Read more

"Loved certain sections of the book, especially the last one. Not a pretty view of what it means to be a man, but Szalay's different perspectives..." Read more

"Well written but dull; irritating central character..." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on January 26, 2017
    This book is actually a series of short stories, each pertaining to different men at different stages in their lives. These characters are well-drawn and each will likely remind the reader of someone they know or have heard about. The stories are related to each other in two ways, as I see it. First the characters are defined by their (generally poor) relationships to friends, spouses and children Second, each is in a crisis largely of his own making which is either directly related to these relationships, or is exacerbated by the quality of those relationships. The common theme is that these characters are isolated and lonely. Many are in a state of despair, wondering about the meaning of the life they have created, deprived of true friendships and lacking in spirituality.

    The stories are extremely well-written, with an artists eye toward detail and texture. The settings are part of the story, often reflecting the mood and disposition of the characters. This book is not recommended for people who are depressed or those looking for a pleasant escape. This is a serious book that should lead to an examination of one's own life.
    12 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on February 1, 2017
    The sheer quality of the writing deserves five stars, but I have ungenerously given the book only four, because of what I would call its extremely reductive rendering of human possibilities. The title, of course, could mean 'the abundance that man is capable of' or 'the puny limit of human potential'; and it's very much the latter sense that applies here. The nine stories that make up this 'novel' are thematically linked in their pitiless portrayal of lives that have no meaning, of characters that are left wondering 'Is this all there is to life?' All the characters are men, ranging in age from about seventeen to seventy-three, and ranging in temperament from coldly selfish to existentially terrified. Sorry, I know that's vague, but I'm not going to provide potted summaries of nine stories. One could, though, generalize about what they don't have: there is no humour, almost no human warmth (the only exception I can think of is in the last story, the affection an elderly repressed homosexual feels for his daughter), no love (again with that one exception), no friendship, with people spending time with each other only because being on their own would be worse. The author has an impressive command of places in Europe one would not necessarily want to visit, and he does not spare us the details, almost without exception bleak. Cyprus in particular would seem to be best avoided as a holiday destination, with Croatia a close second. And don't go skiing in France. All the characters travel, and the keynote here is struck by the young man in the first story who exasperates his travelling companion by constantly wondering aloud why one would want to travel. Certainly nothing in the remaining eight stories provides an answer to that one.
    So why did I not stop reading after the first story? Well, a bit like Houellebecq, the sheer dreadfulness exerts a kind of fascination : can things really be this awful? And can it get any worse? (It does: there is a scene in a Chinese restaurant in Croatia that still makes me feel ill.)
    And then, yes, the writing is truly brilliant. Only a consummate writer could come up with such an infinite variety of morbid states of mind. There is even something exhilarating about it.
    12 people found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on November 12, 2018
    I read this book because it was a finalist for the Booker prize.

    The good - the characters are beautifully developed. The prose flows nicely and you do want to read through it. The scenes make you experience intimately what is going on. You associate with the feelings of the characters.

    The bad - is this what man is? Short stories like these are what, earlier in life, turned me off avant-garde fiction. This is no different. Banal lives and their banal experiences - heck, that is most of most, if not all, peoples' lives. If I wanted to wallow in the pain of banality, I could just let my life go and then simply watch it waste away.

    I gave up on this book after reading through the first three short stories. I think they were beautifully, sadly, tragically written. I hate them.
    11 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on March 19, 2018
    This is a collection of "stories" about being a man, starting through the younger years and ending up in old age. Each is very well written and expertly captures some of the essence of what it is to be a man. They are more like "snaphots" than stories, setting up situations that leave you thinking about how things might turn out. (Indeed, several of them could have worked as longer novellas/novels). As the stories progress, the mood getes darker and darker and the last three stories in particular, are quite depressing! Nevertheless, this is a fantasic book: well written, thought provoking and very much worth the read.
    2 people found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on May 7, 2017
    This book reflected original thinking, characters in whom one could become interested, and good writing. The author uses a range of voices/stories to reflect some of the multiple facets of being human, as well as of being a man. Definitely worth reading.
    One person found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on August 24, 2021
    Booker Prize Shortlist ? I really don't get it. These are short stories with a theme that is endlessly repetitive. Each one - of those I persevered reading - is intensely unattractive. They portray cameo settings in Europe of men who are beamed into situations where inevitably a woman appears. As others have written, the women are by and large not terribly attractive, the settings filthy and the men themselves troubled by their lives, which, for the most part are pretty uninspiring. The staccato, grammatically imperfect style of writing does not help the reader through these stories, most of which end with the man walking off into the ether, leaving this reader anyway wondering what on earth was the point of it all.
    2 people found this helpful
    Report

Top reviews from other countries

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  • Brooke Fieldhouse
    5.0 out of 5 stars Is exactly what it says in its title
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 4, 2025
    I know that this sounds like a well-bruised cliché of a description, but in my view, it could not be more apt. ALL THAT MAN IS by David Szalay is something which does exactly what it says on the tin – or more specifically is exactly what it says in its title.
    Just imagine, that you reduce the human condition. That you take away what Shelley referred to as the heights and beauty which lie in a special space somewhere above the human spirit. That you ignore the real reason why Man is on earth, by eliminating his search for the unique creativity which lies within each and every one of us. That you strip away art and philosophy. What you are left with is a miserable mush not entirely unrelated to the Seven Deadly Sins! David Szalay’s book should in my opinion be taken with a pinch of salt. But by that I don’t mean not taken seriously. On the contrary, it contains nine pieces (I prefer to call them in this case) which are salutary to all of us. Here, in a snapshot is each:
    i) Two ill-matched sixth-formers back-packing across Europe
    ii) The apprentice let down by his computer-gaming fixated mate only to find himself holidaying in Cyprus alone
    iii) The hapless hunk paid to be bodyguard to a high-class escort in London who he thinks he might have fallen for
    iv) The gamaphobic academic don horrified at the news that his girlfriend is pregnant
    v) The workaholic at a Danish newspaper who is so frightened of missing a trick to even go home to sleep
    vi) The stuck-in-a-midlife-rut salesman trying to sell mediocre ski chalets in the French and Swiss Alps
    vii) The post-middle-aged and lonely ex pat with poor social skills and a drink problem, living in Croatia
    viii) The mega yacht-owning fatalistic Russian oligarch being asset-stripped by his domestic partner who he isn’t actually married to
    ix) The old-aged high-achieving civil servant failing to come to terms with his poor health and his covert homosexuality . . .
    . . .And to my mind the most moving of all the pieces which form this work.
    Critics challenge that this is a novel. I don’t know the exact answer to that, except that each of the pieces represents Man at a different age and in a different environment. Also, Piece number i) is linked to Piece number ix) insofar as the grandson of the narrator of the last piece is Simon, one of the backpackers referred to in the first piece.
    Critics suggest that it is a depressing read. Ironic I would say would be more appropriate, and compellingly satirical. The scenes in the bar in the Cyprus hotel swimming pool and elsewhere put me in mind of Swift’s descriptions of the giant women of Brobdingnag in Gulliver’s Travels.
    It’s a book which can – and almost certainly will - make you chuckle, until you realize that most of us, and almost certainly those of us who are elderly have been there in some form or other. A writing style highly individualistic but not unlike that of Bret Easton Ellis.
  • Nehal Paul
    5.0 out of 5 stars awesome!!
    Reviewed in India on November 21, 2016
    Cool!!
  • Titus Aduxus
    5.0 out of 5 stars Just excellent writing, although hardly a novel...
    Reviewed in Germany on January 3, 2017
    Very absorbing and compelling, I read it in less than two days. The author has the knack of pulling the reader into a variety of circumstances and worlds from teenage travelers to bewildered old men, most of which appear unconnected in terms of plot. The linkage comes from circumstance and character. Cleverly constructed; I enjoyed it enough to order another of Szalay's novels on the strength of it.
  • Amazon カスタマー
    5.0 out of 5 stars 本も本屋も素晴らしい!
    Reviewed in Japan on April 9, 2025
    ものすごく良かったです。注文したすぎの日の午前中に来ました。古本なのに新品と同じような状態です。非常に良かったです。ありがとうございました。本の内容も素晴らしいです。
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  • Pierrette Winter
    5.0 out of 5 stars David Szalay has written a brilliant book. Every story lets us discover
    Reviewed in Canada on December 4, 2017
    David Szalay has written a brilliant book. Every story lets us discover, in a few pages, the essence of a character and his struggles and victories. I was sorry when I finished the book, so good was it.