Newton's Swing
{{History merge|originalpage=Draft:Newton's Swing|date=June 2025}}
{{Short description|2000 novel by Chris Paling}}
{{Infobox book
| name = Newton’s Swing
| title_orig =
| translator =
| image = Newtons swing cover.jpg
|alt=Front cover of the Vintage paperback edition of Newton’s Swing, 2001
| author = Chris Paling
| illustrator =
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| country = United Kingdom
| language =
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| subject =
| genre = Fiction
| publisher = Jonathan Cape
| pub_date = 2000
| english_pub_date =
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Newton’s Swing is a novel by Chris Paling. It was first published in 2000 by Jonathan Cape.
cite book
|title=Newton’s Swing
|author= Chris Paling
|publisher=Jonathan Cape
|location=Great Britain
|year=2000
|isbn= 0-224-06058-9}}
Synopsis
John Wayne is an Englishman living in New York, where he works in an advertising agency. He finds his life in disarray when his art dealer wife Susan is shot dead in their apartment while their son sleeps in the room next door.
Reception
Glasgow Herald named Newton’s Swing its book of the day for 22nd July 2000, calling the novel “the work of a real writer” and “full of neat insights into the Disneyfication of American culture,” while also noting it had “big problems” such as the character of Susan being “a fantasised vision of sensuality”. The review concluded that the novel was “compelling” as it “realises the benefit of keeping us in the dark”.
{{cite news
|url= https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/12190054.book-of-the-day/
|title= book of the day
|date= 22 July 2000
|website= The Herald
|access-date= 1 June 2025
}}
Alex Clark wrote in her review for The Guardian that “Paling never quite succeeds in pulling all the elements of his novel together” but commended “his impressive ability to create and manage a range of atmospheres”. She concluded that “Paling is a great thing among British writers: a largely unsung talent who keeps on experimenting and refuses to write an easy book.”
{{cite news
|url= https://www.theguardian.com/books/2000/jul/15/fiction.reviews2
|title= Wayne’s world
|author= Alex Clark
|date= 15 July 2000
|website= The Guardian
|access-date= 1 June 2025
}}