Author:Jane Smiley

This powerful twentieth-century reimagining of Shakespeare's King Lear centers on a wealthy Iowa farmer who decides to divide his farm among his three daughters. When the youngest objects, she is cut out of his will, which sets in motion a chain of events that brings dark truths to light. Ambitiously conceived and stunningly written, A Thousand Acres spins the most fundamental themes of truth, justice, love, and pride into a universally acclaimed masterpiece.
I still don't know how Smiley did it, the voices in A Thousand Acres are so raw and true, right from the first page. It's as if she has channelled them, rather than invented them. It has Biblical sweep – that broad sense of the epic – but Smiley is poignant on the daily-ness of life, cooking, cleaning and the way one sister feels when she finds she can't have children .
—— IndependentIt’s been almost 25 years since Smiley won the Pulitzer Prize for A Thousand Acres. With the Last One Hundred Years trilogy, she surely confirms her place alongside Roth, Updike and Bellow as one of the truly great chroniclers of 20th-century American life.
—— GuardianAncient, brooding technologies...Renegade slaves in a stolen starships...In Bannister’s hands space opera lives on, gaudy and brutal and glorious. The Spin Doctor is back.
—— STEPHEN BAXTERWith Bannister's debut novel, Creation Machine, we seemed to have struck a nugget of SF gold. With Iron Gods our luck continues and it seems that with this new author we may well have found a vein of the stuff.
—— CONCATENATIONa must-read for Star Wars fans
—— NudgeCompelling … Fry’s Star Wars: The Last Jedi captures the spirit of the movie
—— Flickering MythA quality companion piece, worth the three- month wait. Or as Yoda put it might, a page turner
—— TOTAL FILMA lot of fun
—— SFXThe latest thriller from the master of the genre
—— ChoiceA quietly gripping deception of some of the ordinary, messy, interwoven lives that Lucy and her mother discussed in the earlier book
—— Radio TimesStrout, always good, just keeps getting better
—— Vogue USIn her latest work, Strout achieves new levels of masterful storytelling.
—— Publisher's Weekly[F]ull of searing insight into the darkest corners of the human spirit... 'Anything Is Possible' is both sweeping in scope and incredibly introspective. That delicate balance is what makes its content so sharp and compulsively readable... With assuredness, compassion and utmost grace, her words and characters remind us that in life anything is actually possible
—— San Francisco ChronicleThe epic scope within seemingly modest confines recalls Strout's Pulitzer Prize winner, Olive Kitteridge, and her ability to discern vulnerabilities buried beneath bad behavior is as acute as ever. Another powerful examination of painfully human ambiguities and ambivalences-this gifted writer just keeps getting better.
—— Kirkus ReviewsIf you miss the charmingly eccentric and completely relatable characters from Pulitzer Prize winner Elizabeth Strout's best-selling My Name is Lucy Barton, you'll be happily reunited with them in Strout's smart and soulful Anything is Possible
—— Elle USStrout once again shows her talent for adroitly uncovering what makes ordinary people tick
—— BooklistStrout pierces the inner worlds of these characters' most private behaviors, illuminating the emotional conflicts and pure joy of being human, of finding oneself in the search for the American dream
—— NylonAmgash, Illinois, will be familiar to Elizabeth Strout fans as the hometown of the protagonist of her 2016 novel, My Name is Lucy Barton. In Anything is Possible... Lucy's legend looms large... but no prior reading is required to enjoy Strout's powerful writing and empathy
—— Real SimpleWe devoured Strout's last novel, My Name Is Lucy Barton, and her latest-which is loosely linked to Lucy Barton-is no different. Told from multiple points of view, it's about residents of a small town in Illinois struggling with the most relatable and quotidian problems... you'll swear you know these characters. (In fact, it reminds us a bit of another of Strout's masterpieces, the excellent Olive Kitteridge.)
—— PureWowElizabeth Strout's prose is like words doing jazz
—— Rachel JoyceI am deeply impressed. Writing of this quality comes from a commitment to listening, from a perfect attunement to the human condition, from an attention to reality so exact that it goes beyond a skill and becomes a virtue.
—— Hilary Mantel on 'My Name is Lucy Barton'A powerful storyteller immersed in the nuances of human relationships
—— Observer on 'My Name is Lucy Barton'Tender, elegiac, this is the story of a single life that also manages to tell the story of many
—— Independent on 'My Name is Lucy Barton'The writing is wrenchingly lovely. It almost always is with Strout, whether she's knitting metaphors or summarizing, with agonizing economy, whole episodes.
—— New York TimesThere are not many novelists out there producing writing as good as this
—— Daily MailDown to every sentence, it's wise, touching and quietly powerful
—— GraziaAs always, Strout treats even the most difficult characters with rare understanding. "It made me feel much less alone," says on reader of Lucy's memoir. The same will surely be said of Anything Is Possible
—— People (Book of the Week)Gorgeous... Strout is in that special company of writers like Richard Ford, Stewart O'Nan and Richard Russo, who write simply about ordinary lives and, in so doing, make us readers see the beauty of both their worn and rough surfaces and what lies beneath
—— Maureen Corrigan, NPR / Fresh AirHighly enjoyable
—— Sunday TimesA subtle, disturbing and touching book that is a miracle of wisdom and perception
—— Mail on SundayA beautifully told story of small-town Americans dealing with big life issues
—— Good HousekeepingUtterly beautiful in the way that these characters were flawed to their core yet brimful of keeping it together no matter what...I loved it, there wasn't a moment when I didn't believe it.
—— Barb Jungr , BBC Radio 4 Saturday ReviewIn all her novels, including this one, "the kindness of strangers is a fierce sun than can pierce the cloud"
—— The WeekEvery chapter has depth, nuances, restrained descriptions and luminous characterisation. A wonder of a book
—— i NewspaperElizabeth Strout is a novelist in whose hands anything really is possible, and if you've yet to discover her, make this holiday the one you do
—— Daily MailThis glimmering, profound, beautiful novel is modern American writing at its best'
—— Clare AllfreeJust as understated and as full of horrifyingly elisions and surprising epiphanies as its predecessor
—— TLS Books of the YearThis audacious novel is about small-town characters struggling to make sense of past family traumas
—— New York Times Books of the YearStrout turns her clear, incisive gaze on the intricacies and betrayals of small town life
—— Maggie O'FarrellAnything is Possible is predictably great because it's written by Elizabeth Strout, and brilliantly unpredictable - because it is written by Elizabeth Strout
—— Roddy Doyle






