Home
/
Fiction
/
All The Broken Places
All The Broken Places
Dec 2, 2025 5:18 AM

Author:John Boyne

All The Broken Places

'Beautifully told and gripping from first page to last' Sunday Express

'An incredible feat of storytelling... and an old-fashioned page-turner' Donal Ryan

'Gripping and well-honed...consummately constructed, humming with tension' Guardian

'You can't prepare yourself for the magnitude and emotional impact of this powerful novel' John Irving

________________________________

From the author of the globally bestselling, multi-million-copy classic, The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas, comes its astonishing and powerful sequel.

Gretel Fernsby is a quiet woman leading a quiet life. She doesn't talk about her escape from Germany seventy years ago or the dark post-war years in France with her mother. Most of all, she doesn't talk about her father, the commandant of one of the most notorious Nazi concentration camps.

But when a young family moves into the apartment below her, Gretel can't help but befriend their little boy, Henry, though his presence brings back painful memories. One night, she witnesses a violent argument between his parents, which threatens to disturb her hard-won peace.

For the second time in her life, Gretel is given the chance to save a young boy. To do so would allay her guilt, grief and remorse, but it will also force her to reveal her true identity.

Will she make a different choice this time, whatever the cost to herself?

The new novel from John Boyne, WATER, is available for pre-order now.

_______________________________

Praise for John Boyne

'A master storyteller' Daily Express

'One of the best novelists of Ireland' Sunday Express

'Boyne offers writing of insight and beauty' Observer

'John Boyne is a maestro of hisoritical fiction' John Irving

Reviews

Gripping and well-honed...consummately constructed, humming with tension... a defence of literature's need to shine a light on the darkest aspects of human nature and it does so with a novelist's skill, precision and power

—— The Guardian

'What an incredible feat of storytelling. All the Broken Places is a stark confrontation of evil, an examination of guilt and deflection, and an old-fashioned page-turner. John treads the finest of narrative lines with skill and grace and proves himself yet again to be among the world's greatest storytellers. '

—— Donal Ryan

An eloquent meditation on guilt, complicity and redemption.. a remarkable novel, with humanity at its core

—— Mail on Sunday

Beautifully told and gripping from first page to last

—— Sunday Express

This novel, this exceptional, layered and compelling story, is built on modern history and all of us people who live it. The protagonist, the elderly, forthright and mysterious Mrs. Fernsby, is more than memorable and every one of Boyne's characters, and every scene, dark or light, is limned in truth and insight. This book moves like a freight train,with force and consequence for the reader.

—— Amy Bloom

'When is a monster's child culpable? Guilt and complicity are multifaceted. John Boyne is a maestro of historical fiction. You can't prepare yourself for the magnitude and emotional impact of this powerful novel'

—— John Irving

John Boyne is a master storyteller

—— Daily Express

John Boyne is not just one of Ireland's best living novelists but also one of the best novelists of Ireland

—— Sunday Express

Compulsively readable

—— Irish Independent

Boyne offers writing of insight and beauty

—— Observer

Boyne is an incredibly versatile author

—— New Books

Gripping and well honed...Consumately constructed, humming with tension...A defence of literature's need to shine a light on the darkest aspets of human nature and it does so with a noveli's skill, precision and power

—— The Guardian

A remarkable novel with humanity at its core...An eloquent meditation on guilt, complicity and redemption

—— Mail On Sunday

Beautifully told and gripping from first page to last

—— Sunday Express

A really engaging novel about grief and whether or not anyone can be held accountable for the deeds of those they love

—— Press Association

Ian McEwan has always been a generous writer to his readers, his novels bulging with big ideas and rich story-telling… [it’s] hard not to admire the sheer scale of McEwan’s ambition. Many literary novels claim to be exploring ‘what it is to be human’. Few carry out this exploration as thoroughly, or as literally, as [Machines Like Me] does.

—— Daily Mail

McEwan teases out the ethical dilemmas of this storyline with his customary verve… [Machines Like Me is] effortlessly readable and fizzing with ideas.

—— Irish Independent

McEwan returns with another ambitious, high-concept work... [exploring] some very timely moral dilemmas.

—— Economia, The pick of 2019 reads

Adam, an eerily ambiguous presence throughout, proves a highly effective conduit for McEwan to channel all sorts of interesting questions concerning sexual consent, the burden of knowledge, the collapse of the borders between public and private and whether humans or machines are better equipped to behave ethically.

—— Metro

Machines Like Me is ultimately about the age-old question of what makes people human. The reader is left baffled and beguiled.

—— Economist

McEwan gives the whole subject of artificial intelligence a thorough and fascinating examination… a rich and thought-provoking read.

—— James Walton , Reader's Digest

Gripping.

—— Jude Cook , i

In [Machines Like Me], McEwan has taken his creativity into a subversive alternative 1980s London… the young couple at the centre of McEwan’s story find out the danger in inventing things beyond our control.

—— Rebecca Thomas , BBC News

Machines Like Me feels like a novel about empathy, and the artificial limits we set on it – by race, by gender, by geographical location – so that we can sleep at night in a world of cruelty and horror.

—— Helen Lewis , New Statesman

Machines Like Me is deeply intriguing, a little unnerving and quite captivating… [it] will leave you questioning, and imagining how our not too distant future might look.

—— UK Press Syndication

Ian McEwan is one of our most venerated living writers… [in Machines Like Me] McEwan shrewdly touches upon the intricacies of artificial intelligence.

—— Rabeea Saleem , Irish Times

McEwan’s prose is, as expected, nuanced, thoughtful and beguiling.

—— Ella Walker , Eastern Daily Press

It wasn’t going to be long before [McEwan] swooped upon the ethical conundrums of artificial intelligence… Wonderful… [McEwan] pose[s] all sorts of questions about humanity.

—— Suzi Feay , Tablet, *Novel of the Week*

Machines Like Me is elegantly constructed, the sentences are consistently lovely, and the character dynamics…compelling.

—— News Puddle

McEwan knows how to fashion a twisty and pacy narrative, to keep us alive to the possibility that what we’re reading…is not all that it seems.

—— Alex Clark , Oldie, *Nook of the Month*

McEwan muses on love, empathy and the morality and ethics of artificial intelligence… very good.

—— Richard Dismore , Daily Mirror, *Book of the Month*

An important literary contribution to the AI debate, one of the great questions of our time.

—— Country and Townhouse

Precisely rendered and well observed… [McEwan] neatly delineates humanity’s remorseless self-demotion from the centre of the universe to flotsam.

—— Lionel Shriver , Standpoint

[An] undeniably another excellent novel from McEwan, who demonstrates that he can conjure up challenging characters, witty dialogue and moral ambiguity when dealing with sex robots just as brilliantly as he does on literary turf.

—— Hilary Lamb , Institution of Engineering and Technology

Dexterous, utterly gripping and intensely thought-provoking.

—— attitude, *Book of the Month*

Deeply unnerving… What starts out as a darkly funny ménage à trois becomes an unsettling examination of the human condition. Bold, clever.

—— Laura Powell , Sunday Telegraph

The latest novel from my favourite author tackles the subjects of artificial intelligence and what it is to be human. He does this in a surprising, original way, and Adam, the strong, seductive “robot”, is a character that will haunt me for a long time.

—— Victoria Hislop , The Week

[This] new, gripping, beautifully written and constructed, disturbing, and provocative novel…is a thrilling read… the chilling conclusions that hyper-rationalism can come to are brilliantly described.

—— Roger Jones , BJGP

McEwan maintains his status as a master of fiction.

—— Maria Crawford , Financial Times, *Summer Reads of 2019*

A new collection of stories that explores the complex - and often darkly funny - connections between gender, sex, and power across genres.

—— The Week, *Summer reads of 2019*

Ian McEwan’s sublimely playful new novel transports you back to the Eighties but with some major changes, including eerily life-like robots… Dark and slyly funny, it’ll also give your brain a workout.

—— Neil Armstrong and Hephizbah Anderson , Mail on Sunday, *Summer Reads of 2019*

Not only does he pull it off, he does so triumphantly, in the cleverest book I’ve read this year. It’s smart, dark and at times very funny.

—— Jonathan Pugh , Daily Mail, Book of the Year

A saucy, claustrophobic and darkly funny story which is all rather peculiar. Compulsive reading.

—— Henry Deedes , Daily Mail, Book of the Year

I devoured Ian McEwan’s latest very funny spin on Hamlet.

—— Sarah Crossan , Irish Times, Book of the Year

An ingenious rewrite of Hamlet as a murder story in which a foetus is detective and possible victim.

—— Mark Lawson , Guardian, Book of the Year

This is McEwan at his most playfully provocative.

—— Irish Independent, Book of the Year

A clever conceit, elegantly wrought, economically constructed.

—— Tablet, Book of the Year

A bewitching ode to humanity’s beauty, longing and selfishness.

—— Irish Mail on Sunday, Book of the Year

A gripping piece of fiction.

—— Accounting Web UK, Book of the Year

I was hooked from the first page.

—— David Murphy , Irish Independent, Book of the Year

[A] smart, eloquent novel.

—— World of Cruising, Book of the Year

A enthralling read from one of the world’s master storytellers.

—— Helen Brown , Absolutely London

McEwan delights with lyrical prose that is fittingly poetic.

—— Ed Butterfield , The Boar

[A] work which both fascinates and disturbs through its unique perspective on a malicious death… Every sentence is a joy to behold, a gift to the reader of delicately considered prose, and thoughtful observations… Alongside its edgy and entertaining narration, and perhaps in part because of it, the novel manages to challenge all preconceptions of the crime genre, upending the whodunit into an extraordinary will-they-do-it… By nature, Nutshell is a novel which perplexes, entertains, and moves the reader in equal turn, all with McEwan’s startling attention to detail, and luxuriant prose style. Read it for its peculiar narrator, read it for the rapidly-changing and intense emotions, or read it just for the thrill of chase as the killing comes to fruition; whatever intrigues you about this novel, just make sure that you do read it – and feel the thrill for yourself.

—— Eli Holden , Oxford Student

Brilliantly realised… Any book so bound up in a conceit and in its own verbal fireworks at times runs the risk of being a bit clever-clever. But on the whole we accept in a suspension of disbelief the foetus’s pompous mastery of language and imagery and abandon ourselves to the sheer eloquent pleasure of this hilarious romp.

—— Liza Cox , Totally Dublin

Short, odd but pleasurable… Great fun, and very well written.

—— i

Rich in Shakespearean allusion, this is McEwan on dazzling form.

—— Mail on Sunday

Told from a perspective unlike any other, Nutshell is a classic tale of murder and deceit from one of the world’s master storytellers.

—— Silversurfers

Ian McEwan’s brilliance as a stylist and surprise plotter finds a fitting subject in Nutshell…, which is Hamlet as told from inside the womb. Up there with his best.

—— Melvyn Bragg , New Statesman

A gripping tale is told with breathtaking skill, turbocharged with rage against the madness and despair of our modern world.

—— Guto Harri , The Tablet

Nutshell is one of those books you sit down to read and don’t get up until you’ve finished. It is brilliantly executed and full of surprises; original, clever and witty. Simply a must-read

—— Kalwant Bhopal , Times Higher Education

A book I couldn’t put down… brilliantly clever

—— Nadav Kander , Observer
Comments
Welcome to zzdbook comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.zzdbook.com All Rights Reserved