Author:Anne Youngson

Set against the Blitz in London, a young woman's extraordinary journey of self-discovery and an intimate meditation on what it takes to find our place in the world.
A March Best Book in Red
'NOTE PERFECT' East Riding Magazine
'AN EXTRAORDINARY NEW WRITER' Nina Stibbe
I used to believe the world had been created for me; every stone and grain of sand. As I grew older, I began to think of myself as something tacked on to the edge.
1939, London: From McPhail's Passage to Kensington's Grand Palace Hotel, Rose Dunbar is evacuated from her humble home on the Rock of Gibraltar and dropped into a chaotic city of falling bombs, perplexing class rules and bad weather. Despite being 'flagrantly foreign' to the locals, she becomes an efficient go-between for the upper-class ladies helping out with the war effort and her own tribe of noisy displaced families.
It is only when she is shifted to the countryside to become secretary to the plain-speaking and sightless Major Inchbold that Rose's dizzying journey to womanhood will become more surreal than ever, as she drinks tea at the vicarage and stands up for the lower orders. But Rose's greatest dilemma is yet to come, as she must decide where her home - and her heart - really lies.
In Anne Youngson's wry and sublimely understated prose, this unique and beautiful story of love, class and belonging is also a profound and intimate meditation on what it takes to find our place in the world.
*******************************
Praise for ANNE YOUNGSON:
'Tender, wise and moving, Meet Me at the Museum is a novel to cherish.' JOHN BOYNE
'Insightful, emotionally acute and absorbing' DAILY EXPRESS
'Beautiful and affecting' NINA STIBBE
Readers love Anne Youngson's novels:
'I was utterly gripped and felt bereft when I'd finished it' *****
'I could not put this book down. An inspired approach to writing about life and love' *****
'One of my top ten best reads of the year'*****
A tender, often wry novel, rendered with impressive period authenticity
—— MAIL ON SUNDAYSkilful, understated. Comes compellingly to life
—— HARPER'S BAZAARNote-perfect. Like a forgotten classic republished by Persephone Books or Virago
—— East Riding magazineA touching story full of love and humanity
—— YOURS magazineA beautiful story of love and belonging
—— WOMAN'S WEEKLYAn absolute delight
—— SAGAThe perfect book for a cold winter’s night...an immersive gothic tale, dark and mysterious, in which it seems one must fear the living as much as the dead. Truly haunting!
—— ANITA FRANKLooking for an atmospheric read to while away the autumn nights? Set in a big house on the Yorkshire Moors, this Gothic ghost story delivers intrigue and suspense in spades
—— GOOD HOUSEKEEPINGAtcmospheric, ghostly and gripping. A gothic tale of magic and wickedness
—— Yorkshire LifeThe Black Feathers is such a glorious autumnal read. With echoes of Wuthering Heights and Rebecca, it is both a spine-tingling ghost story and a powerful meditation on grief. A beautifully written tale that gripped me from the very first page.
—— IRIS COSTELLONow She is Witch is a beautiful, atmospheric, resonant tale that follows Lux and Else as they fight to be heard and to tell their own stories. Kirsty Logan shows the limited choices left to these women, and draws the reader into their struggles to take control of their own lives.
—— Elizabeth Lee, author of CUNNING WOMENNow She Is Witch is a meticulously researched piece of fantasy
—— SkinnyKirsty Logan is one of the darkest and most playful of writers working right now
—— Stylist, *Books to Look Out For 2023*Frequently compared to Angela Carter for her luxuriant imagination and love of fairytales, Logan shifts from the uncanny to the terrifying in her new collection
—— Guardian, on Things We Say in the DarkWhat Logan brings to her story is a fierce and dream-like poetry that creates layer upon layer of memorable moments and images
—— Scotsman, *Summer Reads of 2023*Logan…captures the mood of the times with a fearful precision… [she] brings…a fierce and dream-like poetry that creates layer upon layer of memorable moments and images… [Now She Is Witch is] compelling, haunting, and enriching
—— Scotsman, *Books of the Year*'[An] intricate and finely crafted debut novel . . . The New Life brims with intelligence and insight, impressed with all the texture (and fog) of fin de siècle London'
—— New York Times'Crewe distinguishes himself both as novelist and as historian . . . He has, more unusually, found a prose that can accommodate everything from the lofty to the romantic and the shamelessly sexy'
—— New YorkerUnflinchingly bold . . . Crewe's language is striking in its originality, his protagonists are colourful and passionate, and their principles are brilliantly drawn
—— i paperSexy, cerebral and moving
—— Mail on Sunday'Atmospheric . . . Extraordinary . . . Crewe's taut prose is shot through with descriptive vividness'
—— James Cahill , TLSExhilarating . . . An adroit novel of ethics
—— New Statesman'Lyrical, piercing . . . The New Life is a fine-cut gem, its sentences buffed to a gleam . . . [Crewe's book] brims with élan and feeling, an ode to eros and a lost world, and a warning about the dangers ahead'
—— Hamilton Cain, Washington Post'Crewe deserves applause for his vivid scene-setting . . . There's much to admire in this meticulously researched, boldly envisioned debut'
—— Prospect'Nothing less than remarkable . . . A beautiful, brave book that reminds us of the terrible human cost of bigotry; this is a novel against forgetting'
—— Michael Schaub, Boston Globe'Rich and engrossing . . . blending the graceful ambiguity of literary fiction with the deftness of a page-turner . . . A smart, sensual debut'
—— Kirkus (starred review)A few established novelists continue to write first-class literary fiction on LGBTQ themes... The debut novel by Tom Crewe...reveals a new talent in the field. It is underpinned by extensive research... [with] a great story at its heart.
—— Literary ReviewThe New Life drives with a satisfying pace and a pleasing sense of both conclusion and open endings... how impressive it is that Crewe has synthesised a coherent and compelling fiction from his elements
—— CriticSuperb . . . Remarkably sensuous and intimate
—— SpectatorCrewe demonstrates rare promise in this beautifully crafted story about two real-life pioneers who tried to make a case for homosexuality in Victorian Britain... Crewe brings this era pungently to life
—— Sunday Times[An] incredibly assured debut... A fresh take on the historical novel, with desire at its heart, written with a charged certainty that the personal is political
—— Guardian, *Summer Reads of 2023*A rich, panoramic novel stuffed with vivid characters, heartaches and hazards... [a] brilliant debut
—— Sunday Times, *Summer Reads of 2023*Crewe's beautiful novel is filled with nuance and forensic insight into love. Deftly recreating the atmosphere of 1890s London, The New Life is a tour de force of intelligent and empathetic fiction
—— UK Press SyndicationA debut of impressive skill... Crewe is a trained historian and it shows: the period detail is exquisite
—— Daily Telegraph, *Summer Reads of 2023*The novel is full of exquisitely drawn detail, right from the opening scene, making the moral and social dilemmas at the centre of the story dynamic and compelling
—— GQ[A] pitch-perfect debut novel
—— Spectator, *Books of the Year*Sometimes there comes along a debut novel that feels like an immediate classic. Tom Crewe’s The New Life is just such a book. It’s a beautifully crafted, seductive story about illicit desires in Victorian London
—— Sunday Times, *Sunday Times Book of the Year*






