Kindle Price: $14.99

Save $3.01 (17%)

These promotions will be applied to this item:

Some promotions may be combined; others are not eligible to be combined with other offers. For details, please see the Terms & Conditions associated with these promotions.

Audiobook Price: $17.72

Save: $10.97 (62%)

You've subscribed to ! We will preorder your items within 24 hours of when they become available. When new books are released, we'll charge your default payment method for the lowest price available during the pre-order period.
Update your device or payment method, cancel individual pre-orders or your subscription at
Your Memberships & Subscriptions

Buy for others

Give as a gift or purchase for a team or group.
Learn more

Buying and sending eBooks to others

  1. Select quantity
  2. Buy and send eBooks
  3. Recipients can read on any device

These ebooks can only be redeemed by recipients in the US. Redemption links and eBooks cannot be resold.

Kindle app logo image

Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.

Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.

Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.

QR code to download the Kindle App

Something went wrong. Please try your request again later.

The Maze at Windermere: A Novel Kindle Edition

3.9 3.9 out of 5 stars 1,091 ratings

Named one of the best books of 2018 by The Washington Post, The Seattle Times, and The Advocate

“Staggeringly brilliant . . . You’ll start 
The Maze of Windermere with bewilderment, but you’ll close it in awe.” —The Washington Post

“Pitch perfect.”New York Times Book Review

When a drunken party guest challenges him to a late-night tennis match, Sandy Allison finds himself unexpectedly entangled in the monied world of Newport, Rhode Island. A former touring pro a little down on his luck, Sandy has nothing to stake against the vintage motorcycle his opponent wagers. But then Alice DuPont—the young heiress to a Newport mansion called Windermere—offers up her diamond necklace.
 
With this reckless wager begins a dazzling narrative odyssey that braids together four centuries of aspiration and adversity in this renowned seaside society capital. A witty and urbane bachelor of the Gilded Age embarks on a high-risk scheme to marry into a fortune; a young Henry James, soon to make his mark on the world, turns himself to his craft with harrowing social consequences; an aristocratic British officer during the American Revolution carries on a courtship that leads to murder; and, in Newport’s earliest days, a tragically orphaned Quaker girl imagines a way forward for herself and the slave girl she has inherited.
 
Gregory Blake Smith weaves these intersecting worlds into a rich, brilliant tapestry. A deftly layered novel of love, ambition, and duplicity,
The Maze at Windermere charts a voyage across the ages into the maze of the human heart.
Read more Read less

Add a debit or credit card to save time when you check out
Convenient and secure with 2 clicks. Add your card

From the Publisher

Editorial Reviews

Review

New York Times Book Review Editors' Choice
A
Washington Post Book We're Talking About This Summer
A
Southern Living Book That We Can't Wait to Read
A
LitHub Ultimate Summer Book
A Washington Book Review Best Novel to Read This Winter
A BookRiot Book You Should Mark Down Now
Winner of the 2019 New England Society Book Award in Fiction


“An intricate creation you'll happily lose yourself in.”
 
—People

“Staggeringly brilliant . . . An extraordinary demonstration of narrative dexterity. Moving up and down through the strata of history, Smith captures the ever-changing refractions of human desire . . . The cumulative effect of this carousel of differing voices is absolutely transporting . . . Looking up from this remarkable novel, one has an eerie sense of history as a process of continuous erasure and revision. You’ll start
The Maze of Windermere with bewilderment, but you’ll close it in awe.” 
The Washington Post

“Smith sprinkles James’s distinctively fresh early style with just the lightest pinch of turgid fussiness—the language is pitch-perfect—and his insights into James’s character and mind are flawless.” 
New York Times Book Review

“Once you read Gregory Blake Smith’s The Maze at Windermere, you’ll understand why Richard Russo calls it ‘a dazzling high-wire act.’ It’s a labyrinthine, layered novel that spans three centuries while following the exploits and experiences of a compelling cast of characters.”
—Southern Living


“The best of the year . . . [The Maze at Windermere] is historical fiction unlike any I’ve read. . . . Each narrative voice Smith invents is pitch-perfect, and the book offers huge formal pleasures as he peels back successions of communities like archaeological layers, connecting them in ways their inhabitants don’t necessarily register.”
—The Seattle Times

“Smith’s vibrant mix of beautiful writing, clarity of voices, flow of history and storytelling, and philosophical reflections had me slowing my pace to stretch out its pleasures.”
 
Star Tribune

“A modern-day epic spanning three centuries and five time periods. It weaves together multiple storylines set in the past and present, handing off each story from one era to the next. . . . 
The Maze features gay characters, freed and enslaved African-Americans, a Jewish-Portuguese immigrant, and a diversity of others mingling together to produce this dazzling novel.” 
—The Advocate

“It is timely, it is important, it made me cry and sit very still when I finished it, and it is among the best American novels I’ve ever read.”
 
—Lit Hub 

“The Maze at Windermere is a dramatic and interesting look into the past of a town and the lives of those who’ve dwelled in it.” 
—New York Journal of Books

“Dazzling . . . an impressive achievement.”
—The Emerald City Book Review

“A breath of fresh air . . . 
Windermere succeeds in delivering a full-bodied portrait of the evolution of our very definition of status and what it really means to make it in the New World.”
—BookBrowse

“This novel is, in a word, excellent. . . . Beautifully drawn . . . Gossamer filaments connect these plotlines; duplicity in all its dismaying forms is a major theme, along with the brilliant contrast between substance and shadow, superficiality and depth. There are moments of wry humor, suspense, gut-wrenching human exchange. And through it all, an honesty—capturing life as people live it—that is made to appear easy, but is very, very difficult to actually achieve in fiction.”
—Historical Novel Society

“It is just so vibrant, so fun, so mesmerizing.”

—“Bill's Books” on NBC New York


“Gregory Blake Smith’s 
The Maze at Windermere is a dazzling high-wire act. I turned every page with a sense of wonder and excitement.”
—Richard Russo, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Empire Falls and Everybody's Fool

The Maze at Windermere is thrilling. This novel restored my faith and made me laugh out loud. It’s rare that a novel comes along that is broad ranging, so very funny, profound, provocative, literary, and page-turning, and also word perfect. I went right back to the beginning when I’d finished, marveling again at the radiant mind of Gregory Blake Smith.”
—Jane Hamilton, author of A Map of the World and The Excellent Lombards
 
“Not since
Beautiful Ruins have I read a novel with such breadth of imagination or depth of heart, nor a cast of characters so real, so varied, so compelling. In five exquisitely braided tales spanning nearly four centuries, Gregory Blake Smith illuminates the everlasting power of our passions and the hazard of our follies—in essence, the many ways we mortals strive and yearn toward the center of the maze we each call life. This book is a tour de force: gorgeous, suspenseful, cunning, and wise.”
—Julia Glass, author of Three Junes
 
The Maze at Windermere is an astonishing book—prismatic, continually surprising, daring not only in structure but in its investigation of the human heart. Somehow it manages to be both ruthless and tender. On top of all that, it’s wildly, hurtlingly entertaining.”
Leah Hager Cohen, author of The Grief of Others

“Compelling . . . The changing language, landscape, and mores of three centuries of American history are depicted with verisimilitude, highlighting what doesn't change at all: the aspirations and crimes of the human heart.” 
Kirkus Reviews

“Intricately designed and suspenseful . . . Though references to James’ work, particularly
The Portrait of a Lady, abound, readers don’t have to be familiar with his novels to relish the well-differentiated voices and worlds or to enjoy the way the novel’s five story lines subtly shift and begin to merge.”
Booklist (starred review)

“Taken individually, each story is dramatic and captivating, but as the author makes ever-increasing connections among the stories and shuffles them all into one unbroken narrative, the novel becomes a moving meditation on love, race, class, and self-fulfillment in America across the centuries.”
 
Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“Compelling . . . Award-winning novelist Smith moves nimbly among his tales’ various settings and diverse characters within the confines of Newport. . . . [An] intricate tale.”
Library Journal (starred review)

About the Author

Gregory Blake Smith is the award-winning author of three previous novels, including The Divine Comedy of John Venner, a New York Times Notable Book. His short story collection, The Law of Miracles, won the Juniper Prize and the Minnesota Book Award. He has received a Stegner Fellowship at Stanford University and the George Bennett Fellowship at Phillips Exeter Academy and grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Bush Foundation, and the Minnesota State Arts Board. Smith is currently the Lloyd P. Johnson-Norwest Professor of English and the Liberal Arts at Carleton College.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B06ZZ9Q5FY
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Penguin Books; Reprint edition (January 9, 2018)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ January 9, 2018
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 2098 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 351 pages
  • Page numbers source ISBN ‏ : ‎ 0735221928
  • Customer Reviews:
    3.9 3.9 out of 5 stars 1,091 ratings

About the author

Follow authors to get new release updates, plus improved recommendations.
Gregory Blake Smith
Brief content visible, double tap to read full content.
Full content visible, double tap to read brief content.

Discover more of the author’s books, see similar authors, read author blogs and more

Customer reviews

3.9 out of 5 stars
3.9 out of 5
1,091 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on January 17, 2018
This is a remarkable and absorbing novel. Spanning over three hundred years, and anchored by the historic city of Newport, RI, the novel follows the lives of five different people at five different historic periods: a Quaker teen girl orphaned by the loss of both parents in the same year, a British officer managing spies during the Revolutionary War, the novelist Henry James at the cusp of his decision to dedicate his life to his art, a Gilded Age gay New York man trapped by the legal and moral strictures of his time and by his ambition to live a life among "the 400" who rule New York high society, and a modern tennis pro at the end of his tournament career who must deal with the fact that despite having been a better player than everyone in the whole world except forty-six other professionals he is still seen as a failure lacking "the killer instinct."

Written in styles designed to capture the style and sensibility of the years it is set in, the novel is flawlessly written and captivating. The metaphor of the boxwood maze at a fictitious Newport gilded age "cottage" carries through the complicated lives and relations of all of its characters, each of whom struggle with the vagaries of love as well as the moral issues of their times, from slavery to the treatment of gay people and people with handicaps to the constant battleground of sexual love and the problems that surround it. Each major character must wrestle with the question of just how the demands of moral behavior are imposed, some finding goodness in themselves, others murderous evil. It is left to the reader to ultimately decide who is a victim and who a villain.

The author has obviously modeled himself on the great novels of manners and morality of Henry James, who himself serves as a character and suffers a moral crisis in the book. The style is crisp and readable, the characters vivid and engaging, and the reader is brought into the plot, making his own decision as to the worthiness and future of each character.

This book is well worth your time and money, and in my opinion deserves consideration when the major awards come around. I hope that the fact that the author is not a major literary figure does not prevent the book from getting the attention it deserves, and hope that the author has more work of this caliber in store for us.
102 people found this helpful
Report
Reviewed in the United States on March 14, 2019
Read The Maze at Windermere for book club. It’s not the easiest book to get into and I actually decided to read reviews about a third of the way through. The reviews were stellar so I read on. I also watched an hour long interview with the author Gregory Blake Smith which I found of interest. I like to find some redeeming qualities in characters, but Smith contends characters should be interesting and not necessarily liked. I read on. I found it a bit difficult to keep the five different timeframes in focus. There are many characters to keep track of. I give it four stars because the writing style is extremely well done.
Reviewed in the United States on March 4, 2019
I expected to love this book, but, alas, I found it frustrating and disappointing. I should have know from the opening scenes that this book wasn’t for me. It begins by introducing us to an aging, rather sad professional tennis player who’s spending the summer teaching tennis to the wealthy folk in Newport, Rhode Island, sleeping with assorted women, while he figures out what to do with the rest of his life. Not really a character I found very compelling. The book follows five separate stories, each taking place in a different time period in Newport. It’s a clever idea, but I didn’t find any of the characters particularly fascinating. I didn’t connect with them. Nor did I find the plots in the separate threads very interesting. The most frustrating part of the book was the ending. The book just ends.... without any resolution for several of the threads. What’s the point of that? On the plus side, the writing is gorgeous and the author does a terrific job of making sure the characters in each section are reflective of the attitudes of the time period. 21st century ways of seeing the world don’t turn up in the previous time periods. I would only recommend this book if you grew up in Newport or are a fan of Henry James. He appears as a central character in one section, a young man struggling with realizing that he does not feel attracted to women as other men do, and his writings are mentioned in another. With some novels, I feel as if the author is writing the book especially for me. There’s a real connection with the characters or the themes in the book. I never felt that way about this book. It just wasn’t the book for me.
20 people found this helpful
Report
Reviewed in the United States on March 2, 2019
The Maze of Windermere is an intricate and beautifully written book which tells four interweaving stories of lives lived in Newport at four distinct times: 2011, 1896, 1863, and 1778. The stories have a diverse array of characters: rich and poor, powerful and powerless, free and enslaved, gay and straight, African-American, & white, Jewish and Christian, disabled and athletic. Newport changes greatly with each era from a playground of the rich, to the golden age, to the civil war and finally the revolutionary war when it was a port for slave traders. Gregory Blake Smith manages to find distinctive voices for each character in each period, as every individual grapples with the social restraints of his or her period while searching to find his or her way through the literal Maze of Windermere and the metaphorical one of life. Hesitantly and, at times, ambivalently, each character moves towards self-discovery.
2 people found this helpful
Report
Reviewed in the United States on February 21, 2018
I rarely read fiction. But I love history. So, I really enjoyed this historic novel that traces the lives of people from several times in Newport from the 1600s to the present. The author takes care to have the narrators write in the style of the time in which they live, using the expressions of their time which makes it even more fun to read. Each story leads you through its own drama in very unpredictable ways, and leaves you wondering about the future of its characters in a satisfying way.
15 people found this helpful
Report

Top reviews from other countries

Pamela Scott
1.0 out of 5 stars Dull, long-winded and tedious
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on May 2, 2019
Oh boy, did this book disappoint me. I thought I was in for a good read what will all the praise heaped on the book. This is the kind of book I tend to really enjoy, grand, sweeping sagas that span generations. I was looking forward to getting my teeth sunk into this one. It really didn’t pan out for me. I found the book dull and tedious for the most part. The author covers five different stories across five centuries. The premise reminded me of the book by Edward Rutherfurd which I love. The Maze at Windermere did not work for me on any level. It’s boring, the prise is long-winded and dry and the characters are tedious. I struggled to get through this one. What a waste of time, space and money!
Report an issue

Does this item contain inappropriate content?
Do you believe that this item violates a copyright?
Does this item contain quality or formatting issues?