"'The Last Days of Roger Federer feels like what Martin Amis called ""a transfusion from above"", but one from your smartest and funniest friend . entertaining . wide-ranging, eye-opening . His desire to keep going is probably hastening the end, but as long as he keeps his eye sharp and his sense of humour (which is ""about so much more than being funny; it's an entire relation to - and view of - the world""), we'll be laughing, and thinking, all the way' - The Times 'Finely crafted . The capaciousness of Dyer's themes allow him to roam widely. While he is a connoisseur of the humdrum details of failure - often skilfully crafted for humour with himself as the target - he also has a joyous appreciation of the transcendent and the triumphant . Age has come upon him, but youth has not gone. It is knee supports on both legs that now keep him on the tennis court, but like Federer, it is a reserve of flair, touch, timing and a keen eye that keeps him in the game' - Guardian 'Tennis, jazz, Dylan, movies, TV, drugs, Nietzsche, Beethoven.
So, why am I laughing? Because Geoff Dyer once again melds commentary and observation with intellect and wit. Bouncing between criticism and memoir, Dyer is one of the few writers whose paragraphs I can immediately reread and get more from. The twists, turns, and delights abound, and when you finally put the book down you think, ""Oh, yes, I've always been this smart, haven't I?""' - STEVE MARTIN 'Dyer writes amusingly and sometimes poignantly about the feeling of time running out, books he can't finish (other people's, and his own), the vicissitudes of artistic fame and the perversity of being invigorated by thoughts of quitting. Few contemporary prose writers are as abundantly quotable as Dyer' - Spectator 'What a capacious sensibility this cultural magpie has, chatting to the reader in warmly companionable fashion, his prose peppered with self-deprecatory humour and footnoted asides, his erudition never pompous or platitudinous . these may be last days for Dyer as they are for Federer, but there's always somewhere else to go, even if it's only inwards' - Daily Telegraph ".