Author:C. K. Stead

As their freinds leave for Europe and the government gets tough with the unions, a bohemian community is enjoying the euphoria of youth.
It was their dreamtime. The wider world beckoned from the white ships sailing past Rangitoto Island, but the dream was also here on the Takapuna shoreline of Auckland, where the artist Melior Farbro grew his vegetables and let Cecilia Skyways follow her own form of Zen Buddhism in his garden hut. Where Curl Skidmore, his brilliant young head full of novels waiting to be unravelled, could dream of God, Fame, Nirvana, Great Love, or maybe just sex. Where not even the harbourfront strike of 1951 could convince them that life wasn't about poetry and painting and potential.
Poetic, funny and very enjoyable.
—— Richard Francis , Times Literary SupplementIt seems incontestable to me that C.K. Stead is among the very best contemporary novelists.
—— John De Fable , SpectatorA hysterically funny monologue which has already added a new prototype to American literature... Anyone who can recall anything of the awesome mystery and humiliating farce of growing up will find this book compulsive reading. And it is blessedly, extremely funny
—— SpectatorPhilip Roth's gift for fantasy, his superb dialogue, his ability to evoke places and atmospheres, make Portnoy's Complaint at once hilariously, scabrously funny and deeply moving
—— Financial TimesAlexander Portnoy is a great comic character. He is going to be for many readers what his mother was for him: The Most Unforgettable Character I've Met
—— New StatesmanA magnificent portrayal of how a beautiful young girl might become the first woman ever to win the Grand National.
—— The SpectatorClassic Cooper: either the perfect beach read or else something to curl up on the sofa with to keep out the encroaching autumn chill.
—— Sunday ExpressSharp, funny and touching.
—— Times Literary SupplementWarmed by the tender characterisation that has made Jilly Cooper a national treasure.
—— COUNTRYLIFEJust the thing for a wet winter weekend.
—— The IndependentUnrivalled joy
—— TatlerTo read one of Cooper's books is to escape into an alternative universe in which all is right with the world.
—— The GuardianJilly's descriptions of the glorious Cotswold countryside are some of the most lyrical ever written and her comedies of manners rival Nancy Mitford, if not Jane Austen.
—— (Femail) The Daily MailAs plots go you can't get more charming than this.
—— Daily ExpressThis is definitely the most exciting book that landed on my doormat this year. Cooper is a major genius...the narrative zips along, pierced with her characteristically brilliant ear for dialogue and empathy for human relationships of all kinds. You won't be able to put it down.
—— Sara Lawrence , Daily MailA rollicking fantasy.
—— Horse and HoundI loved it.
—— Rosie Boycott, Dec 2010An exciting, revealing and touching story
—— Lesley McDowell , Sunday Herald, Christmas round upThe novel's interest (or lack thereof) lies mainly in its stubborn refusal of anything resembling a narrative payoff...I loved it, right down to the prose, which, unspooling in a vaguely menacing present-continuous, sounds like screenplay instructions to a set designer
—— Anthony Cummins , The TimesA dazzlingly agile novel about the interconnectedness of things
—— MetroEntertaining as well as ambitious
—— The HeraldMcCarthy's descriptions of nature and of the everyday details of the era are vivid, surprising and true. And while the writing is often beautiful and ornate, the story has a bracing, Beckett-like severity
—— Irish Times






