The writing of
Netherland occupied O'Neill for seven years. When it was finished, O'Neill had great trouble in finding an agent. The book was turned down by every major US publisher, until it was accepted by
Pantheon Books, a division of
Random House. Chief executive
Sonny Mehta was a cricket fan, and after reading
Netherland, wrote a strong personal recommendation to booksellers.
Netherland was published in May 2008 and was featured on the cover of the
New York Times Book Review where senior editor
Dwight Garner called it "the wittiest, angriest, most exacting and most desolate work of fiction we've yet had about life in New York and London after the World Trade Center fell". Later that year, the book was included in the
New York Times Book Review list of "10 Best Books of 2008" as chosen by the paper's editors.
James Wood, writing in
The New Yorker, called it "one of the most remarkable
postcolonial books I have ever read". He wrote that it has been "consistently misread as a 9/11 novel, which stints what is most remarkable about it: that it is a postcolonial re-writing of
The Great Gatsby." In an interview with the author published at the end of the Harper Perennial paperback edition, Joseph O'Neill remarks, "Clearly
Netherland is having some sort of conversation with
The Great Gatsby—saying goodbye to it perhaps, and to some of the notions associated with that wonderful book." ==Awards and nominations==