Yes.
I've read it.
I love Julian Barnes; this is his second best work of fiction I think.
But fiction doesn't really describe what he does best. Barnes combines literary criticism, historical document, self-revelation, philosophy and invention to make a coherent whole.
And despite my description making this sound dry and worthy, it is wry, funny, and deeply human.
A History Of The World in 10 1/2 Chapters does something very similar, a little better.
...and so does Arthur and George, though I haven't accounted this as fiction because though the ingredients are the same, the slew is more towards historical document..
But my favourite is Nothing To Be Frightened of. Again, a comparable mix. But this is a laying bare of his thoughts on death, family, life, writing and the urge be immortal through literature. Oh and did I mention death?
And a lot more fun than it sounds.
I like Julian Barnes. Had you gathered? AND he's my Facebook chum now. Along with a few thousand other arse lickers devotees....