Author:E. M. Forster

A sunny, brilliantly witty comedy of manners, this edition of A Room with a View is part of the Penguin Essentials collection and features beautiful cover art by Chris Silas Neal
'You love the boy body and soul, plainly, directly, as he loves you . . .'
Lucy has her rigid, middle-class life mapped out for her until she visits Florence with her uptight cousin Charlotte, and finds her neatly ordered existence thrown off balance.
Her eyes are opened by the unconventional characters she meets at the Pension Pertolini: flamboyant romantic novelist Eleanor Lavish, the Cockney Signora, curious Mr Emerson and, most of all, his passionate son George.
Lucy finds herself torn between the intensity of life in Italy and the repressed morals of Victorian England, personified in her terminally dull fiancé Cecil Vyse. Will she ever learn to follow her own heart?
'He says, and even more implies, things that no other novelist does, and we can go on reading Forster indefinitely' The Times
'I loved it. My first intimation of the possibilities of fiction' Zadie Smith
I loved it. My first intimation of the possibilities of fiction
—— Zadie SmithHe says, and even more implies, things that no other novelist does, and we can go on reading Forster indefinitely
—— The TimesNot since Lucky Jim has such a funny book about academic life come my way
—— Sunday TimesA wily, insightful and engaging book about human nature... McAfee has an excellent eye for detail and a wry comic touch... The Spoiler has a cracking plot, alive with twists and turns and meaning
—— Sarah Vine , The TimesExtremely funny and sharply observed... Seizes the noble tradition of the Journalism Novel and rings some delightful changes on it
—— IndependentTightly written and pacy. The central characters are believable, the setting exact, and one would defy the reader not to feel contained, held, by the professionalism and dexterity of the author
—— Hilary Fannin , Irish TimesRichly comic and entertaining
—— TatlerHighly entertaining
—— GuardianSpritely satire
—— Sunday TimesA clever satire, set in 1997, about the last days of Fleet Street... Darkly entertaining
—— RedA wide-ranging, energetic satire on what used to be called Fleet Street
—— Times Literary SupplementWhen high meets lowbrow, comedy ensues, but McAfee's novel is not without serious intent. She deftly peels away her characters' pretensions, forcing readers to examine their own prejudices.
—— ScotsmanSparky tragicomedy
—— Daily MailMcAfee is a superlative writer and plotter...McAfee has produced a locus classicus of Fleet Street
—— Rachel Johnson , The LadyDarkly funny but also a very timely read
—— Stylist[A] satirical debut about the newspaper business
—— Stand PointA cutting, hilarious portrait of British print journalism... An entirely human story that brilliantly recreates and analyses the recent past
—— The TimesThose gripped by the escalating News International scandal might enjoy the latest newspaper novel Annalena McAfee's The Spoiler
—— Glasgow Heraldauthentic, entertaining and draws on her own experience as an arts journalist
—— Daily ExpressThe Spoiler - set in the halcyon days before phone hacking - was one of the funniest and sharpest fleet street novels in years.
—— David Robson , Sunday Telegraph SevenMcAfee - herself a former journalist - evokes two distinct eras and styles of journalism, that of fearless frontline reportage and that of its successor: style-oriented, celebrity-obsessed features coverage... This is a pacy read that leaves little doubt in the reader's mind that one school of journalism deserves more mourning than the other
—— Alex Clark , GuardianMarvellous satire...the novel is cunningly plotted and satisfyingly nuanced
—— Independent on SundayIf the peek into the world of newspaper journalism afforded by the Leveson inquiry has you gasping for more, then this timely paperback release is perfect...a fiendishly funny (and frighteningly plausible) world of fiddled expenses and suspect tactics
—— ShortlistThoroughly enjoyable behind-the-scenes expose of an ambitious celebrity journalist's attempt to nail the scoop of her life
—— MetroThis is the paperback edition. The hardback appeared before the News Corporation bosses were dragged into the Commons. McAfee was either very prescient or close to the action, holding her fictional hacks to account for printing false stories gleaned from disreputable sources
—— Julia Fernandez , Time Out