Author:Christopher Isherwood

The scene is 1920s Kensington and Philip and Joan are testing the very limits of politeness and restraint as they fight to expunge the oppression of their mother - by whatever means necessary. In his first novel, Christopher Isherwood paints an intimate portrait of the battle between old and young as he explores the destruction of a son by a domineering parent.
In Isherwood's work, a magic potion of history and invention, the voice is clear, and, no matter how many times we hear it, it always seems to be speaking for the first time
—— New York TimesChristopher Isherwood is back in vogue
—— IndependentThat young man holds the future of the English novel in his hands
—— Somerset W. MaughamBold, playful, smart and lively
—— Time OutAn epic, polyphonic juggernaut of a novel. Ambitious, skilfully plotted, and full of wonderful surprises. I was hooked from the very first page
—— Tahmima Anam, author of A Golden AgeA compelling tale that weaves together the profound and the playful, the modern and the traditional, the secular and the mythological - all the strands that make up today's India
—— Manil Suri, author of The Death of VishnuAlice Albinia writes with tender acuity, and without illusions, of her characters' foibles. She brings that same unsparing, illuminating gaze to bear upon Delhi and India in this wise and lovely novel
—— Amit ChaudhuriA talent to look out for
—— Stephanie Cross , Daily MailLove, betrayal, war and peace charge this powerful debut
—— Fanny Blake , Woman & HomeTillyard writes in fluid, largely understated prose and her descriptions are wonderful
—— Lucy Atkins , Sunday TimesTillyard is a fluent and attractive chronicler of detail and some of her imaginative liberties are ingenious
—— Jane Shilling , Sunday TelegraphThis saga of lives swept up in the Peninsular War recalls Georgette Heyer at her best...impossible to put down
—— Kate Saunders , SagaA thrilling romance brought to life with exquisite detail
—— PrimaA prodigious talent able to combine meticulous research with novelistic devices...there is much to enjoy and admire
—— Norma Clarke , Times Literary SupplementFluently written and impeccably researched
—— The LadyGripping
—— Easy LivingIt is time we stopped thinking of the historical novel as a genre, and an inferior one at that. If its ostensible subject matter means that it doesn't attempt to tell us how we live now, nevertheless a novel set back in time may, if it is good, say as much about what it is to be alive as one set in the next street or another country today. Tides of War is such a novel. It is diverting, but not a diversion
—— The SpectatorA well written, engaging read...beautifully observed
—— History TodayA vivid account of a couple of years in the Peninsula Campaign and a sympathetic portrait of those left behind
—— Joanna Hines , Literary ReviewA delicious novel by an experienced author who captures the scientific atmosphere of the early 19th century with a devastating study of infidelity
—— Colin Gardiner , Oxford TimesThe real life players of the Napoleonic era spring to life
—— iCompelling
—— Big IssueHighly assured and almost educational with its broad sweep of history
—— Jane Housham , GuardianTillyard’s achievement is in this original portray log the Regency era and its relevance to our own time
—— Philippa Williams , The Lady






