Author:Katharine McGee

The New York Times Bestseller
'An addictive Jilly Cooperesque saga' Guardian
'A fun, fast-paced read packed with drama, scandal and romance' The Sun
Crazy Rich Asians meets The Crown in this completely addictive modern-day royal romance.
The Washingtons have ruled America for almost 250 years.
They're gorgeous, fiercely famous and the beating heart of the most glorious royal court in the world.
But behind the glittering ballrooms, elegant gowns, and seemingly perfect public personas lie forbidden romances and scandalous secrets. Together four young women will navigate gossip, drama, and the eyes of the world upon them.
There's everything to play for - but there can only be one queen.
This is the story of the most famous family in the world.
This is the story of the American royals.
Scandals, romance and betrayal abound [...] pure escapism
—— Mail on Sunday - 'Must-Read Books of the Year'An addictive Jilly Cooperesque saga
—— GuardianA fun, fast-paced read packed with drama, scandal and romance
—— The SunWith the seemingly endless influx of new novels hitting the real and virtual bookshelves every day, the choice can seem overwhelming. But, occasionally a novel comes along with the promise of delivering escapism by way of a subject matter - royals, romance and a Gossip Girl-esque scandal - that is a no-brainer must-read . . . American Royals [is] just such a novel set to ignite and delight book clubs and literary-loving fans of The Princess Diaries, Gossip Girl, The Crown or even just the real-life British royals.
—— Vogue AustraliaThere's enough palace intrigue, royal shenanigans, and even a smidgen of sex to satisfy anyone who loves a bit of gossip . . . An entertaining royal family modeled after the residents of Buckingham Palace.
—— Kirkus ReviewsMcGee crafts a deliciously soapy American royal family . . . McGee's characters are well-crafted and flawed, giving the narrative emotional texture that elevates it above the dramatic formula
—— Publishers WeeklyFor readers looking for intrigue-and for those who like their royal fever with a twist-this is a quick and delicious read
—— BooklistA fun twist on history as we know it, and the ending will have readers hoping for a sequel
—— School Library JournalI really enjoyed this book. For me it was The Crown meets Gossip Girl which was always going to be a fun combination. The structure, pace and characterisation made this an easy and very enjoyable read.
—— BookBagRelatable, believable, fantastical, aspirational, and completely addictive . . . I loved, loved, loved this book
—— Sara Shepard, author of Pretty Little LiarsInventive, fresh, and deliciously romantic - an absolute delight!
—— Sarah J. Maas, author of Throne of GlassRushdie’s Booker-longlisted fourteenth novel is certainly the work of a frisky imagination... You can’t help being charmed by Rushdie’s largesse.
—— Guardian[Quichotte] is Don Quixote for our time, a smart satire of every aspect of the contemporary culture. Witty, profound, tender, this love story shows a fiction master at his brilliant best.
—— MillionsQuichotte overwhelms you from the first page with a lightning storm of ideas and a monsoon of exuberant prose… Quichotte has all the verbal pyrotechnics and outlandish invention that will be familiar to readers of Rushdie’s fourteen previous novels, but at the heart it is a serious and affecting tale about the irresistible pull of history… those who are prepared to sit back and enjoy the ride will encounter scenery like none they have ever seen.
—— Literary ReviewNothing but extraordinary... This incisively outlandish but lyrical meditation on intolerance, TV addiction, and the opioid crisis operates on multiple planes, with razor-sharp topicality and humor, delivering a reflective examination of the plight of marginalized personhood with veritable aplomb. Highly recommended.
—— Library Journal (starred review)Quichotte is a story of breathtaking intellectual scope... Like Cervantes, Rushdie is able to balance his commentary with a voice full of tragicomic fervor, which makes the novel a thrilling adventure on a sentence-by-sentence level and another triumph for Rushdie.
—— Bookpage (starred review)Rushdie’s rambunctious latest... [is an] uproarious comedy… a brilliant rendition of the cheesy, sleazy, scary pandemonium of life in modern times.
—— Publishers Weekly *starred review*A genre-hopping, cross-country picaresque which rips along with a great deal of wit, verve and empathy.
—— Dorian Lynskey , iNewsRushdie's dazzling and provocative improvisation on an essential classic has powerful resonance in this time of weaponized lies and denials.
—— Booklist *starred review*Hilarious by all accounts.
—— LitHubThis sardonic portrait of America combines exuberant humour with sober reflections on the toxic excesses of 21st-century media.
—— Max Davidson , Mail on SundayRushdie’s most personal novel for years… a truly imaginative response to his own experience of exile and dislocation.
—— Allan Massie , ScotsmanQuichotte is funny… beautiful, lucid prose.
—— Johanna Thomas-Corr , ObserverAbout a dozen pages into Quichotte, Salman Rushdie’s 14th novel, we read of an invention so devious, so outrageous, that it dispels any thought that the author’s imaginative powers might be waning… It’s a masterstroke in an uneven but diverting and occasionally brilliant novel… [and] a perfect fit for a moment of transcontinental derangement.
—— Christian Lorentzen , Financial TimesNow in his eighth decade, it is clear he [Rushdie] still possesses the linguistic energy, resourcefulness and sheer amplitude of a writer half his age – buoyant and life-enhancing qualities shared by his great Spanish predecessor [Cervantes]
—— Jude Cook , iRushdie’s novel is many things beyond just a Don Quixote retelling. It’s a satire on our contemporary fake-news, post-truth, Trumpian cultural moment, where the concept of reality itself is coming apart. It’s a sci-fi novel, a spy novel, a road trip novel, a work of magical realism. It’s a climate change parable, and an immigrant story in an era of anti-immigration feeling. It’s a love story that turns into a family drama... Characters, narratives and worlds collide and come apart in spectacular fashion, while Rushdie maintains an exhilarating control over it all.
—— IndependentA meditation on life, death and the stories told about both.
—— UK Press SyndicationThe fiction about fiction that takes the breath away… Quichotte expertly does it again.
—— Michael Wood , London Review of BooksFunny and touching and sad and oddly vulnerable, rather like its eponymous hero… [Quichotte is] compelling.
—— Lucasta Miller , SpectatorRushdie is a master storyteller who weaves his fictions and characters into such agreeable tapestries.
—— Sarah Hayes , TabletThe novel's dazzling virtuosity and cascade of cultural references culminate in a final moving moment of hope
—— Jane Shilling , Daily MailAn Updikean epic of intertwined families destabilized by grief and estrangement following a mother's breakdown, then redeemed by their enduring compassion for one another
—— Best Books by Women Summer 2019, OPRAH Magazine10 new books to read this August
—— SheerLuxeA powerful tale of two neighbouring families forever entwined by love and tragedy. . . A touching read
—— Woman's WeeklyMary Beth Keane draws two families in sharp, moving detail . . . With hints of Curtis Sittenfeld about it - the way it effortlessly unspools years, but buffets you with a huge amount of detail - it considers friendship and mental ill health, how love changes and warps, and despite a fairly slow start, does so beautifully
—— The HeraldPoignant and powerful
—— ImageA miniature epic . . . like Elizabeth Strout, Keane is good at creating distinctive characters - flawed, empathetic men and women whose inner landscapes she captures in powerful, pared-down prose. The novel is a nuanced portrait of the impact of mental illness and addiction, the limitations and endurance of love and of how 'we repeat what we don't repair'
—— Belfast TelegraphA thought-provoking read exploring mental illness, alcoholism and violence
—— CandisFans of Celeste Ng will love this modern American novel based on two families linked by tragedy and passion . . . A lovely mix of childhood memories growing in to adulthood, and its really powerful
—— StellarWith the author's deftness of touch, characters are rendered as real as those you encounter in daily life, and it's hard not to think about them even after reading the last pages
—— Connaught TelegraphAn engrossing drama about family, forbidden love, the toll of mental illness and the power of mercy
—— People MagazineA powerful novel about mental illness, alcoholism, love and redemption
—— Daily ExpressGripping and full of incident, a deft balance of horror and wit… As ever, Atwood cuts to the truth about women and power
—— Johanna Thomas-Corr , Evening Standard, *Book of the Week*The oppressed feminist shriek of the first novel gets its more optimistic echo in The Testaments...has the dramatic thrust and power to scorch the memory
—— Serena Davies , Daily TelegraphIt is a measure of Atwood's virtuosity as a writer... that rather than picking up where she left off in 1985 when The Handmaid's Tale was published, she has written such a perfect companion piece
—— Mary Carr , Mail on Sunday IrelandLike all good dystopian writers, she presents us with a cracked mirror in which we are asked
to see distorted images of ourselves
If The Handmaid's Tale is disturbing, The Testaments is, in many ways, even more so. Less violent, sure, but Gilead isn't fresh and new at this point. It is a society that has existed for well over a decade, and as such it has become normality for all those who live there...this is, perhaps, far more frightening than the punishments and cruelty we see in the original text
—— Ann Dowd , StylistAfter Donald Trump's election, Ms Atwood came to be seen by some as a soothsayer... If The Handmaid's Tale was a warning, The Testaments has a more positive message... Ms Atwood says that it reflects a sense of hopefulness on her part
—— The EconomistFor those waiting to find out what happened next, The Testaments is a fantastic conclusion to the story
—— Sarah Bates , Socialist WorkerThe transgressive, deliciously dangerous mind of Margaret Atwood
—— EsquireCompelling, poignant and controlled, Atwood's latest work will have any reader gripped
—— Harper's BazaarThe Handmaid’s Tale and The Testaments can seem like dark tales for dark times. But Atwood argues that they are not. "Writing is always an act of hope,” she says, “because it assumes a reader. It assumes a reader in the future"... If what we need right now is a great big bundle of hope – and we do – I for one feel extremely reassured that Margaret Atwood is on hand to provide it.
—— Erica Wagner , New StatesmanBeautiful in its depth... It is in some ways the continuation and in some sense a response to the extraordinarily powerful world of Gilead she created in The Handmaid's Tale 30-odd years ago. There is a need now to look at what complicity, resilience and resistance might look like
—— Peter Florence, Chair of Booker Judges , The TimesAtwood mania is entirely merited. Not only is there no greater living writer, "Peggy Nature" as friends refer to her eco-activism, is our beloved sage. Her novels have engaged with myth, identity, the sisterhood, and our apocalyptic ecological crisis. Yet nothing has taken flight like her patriarchal dystopia, and nowhere more so than among women
—— Hannah Betts , Daily TelegraphShe's always before her time. Each novel is about something people become incredibly interested in half an hour later... There is this tradition of women's writing that uses irony and lightness of touch to deliver monstrous concepts and beliefs. It's that ironic voice that has helped her seamlessly move from one generation of reader to the next. That is the test of a great writer
—— Carmen Callil , ObserverA savage and beautiful novel, and it speaks to us today, all around the world, with particular conviction and power
—— Peter Florence, Booker Prize judge , GuardianThe Testaments has come at the right moment for her as well as us because she's now a real sage
—— Jeanette Winterson , ObserverA feast
—— Josie Long , GuardianA truly dazzling literary feat that – blessed be the fruit – entirely lives up to the hope and the hype… Atwood’s particular genius is pushing and pushing at sexist tropes until they reach their grotesque but ultimately logical conclusion
—— Ceri Radford , IndependentThe Testaments calls for thought and reflection… ideological commitment is not its only characteristic. It is also a thriller, with a fast-paced plot featuring many entangled concealments and dramatic confrontations… Atwood’s writing is at its incisive best... Atwood is not simply responding to our current anxieties… it is also her own testament, and a renewal of the warning of The Handmaid’s Tale
—— Dinah Birch , Times Literary SupplementThe Testaments is all the better for choosing other, quieter forms of resistance for women under Gilead’s rule… The sequel is able to buoy you as a reader in a way The Handmaid’s Tale had no interest in doing, but sit with it and it’s still slippery and at times satisfyingly unsatisfying. This is an intriguing book from a woman who knows she can do bleak any day of the week
—— Sophie Charara , WiredThe Testaments combines gripping entertainment with a complex sense of humanity
—— Sarah Ditum , LancetLydia's fascinating tale serves almost as a prequel, while the girls' stirring battle is peppered with pithy wit. Praise be
—— Deirdre O'Brien , Sunday MirrorAtwood has conjured a compelling sequel to The Handmaid’s Tale that is tautly plotted in spare, economical prose… In The Testaments, Atwood succeeds in regaining control of Gilead through words
—— Ruth Scurr , SpectatorTerrifying, rage-inducing and utterly gripping
—— Eastern Daily PressThe interaction between these three women is deftly drawn. The enemy never feels other than overwhelmingly malign, yet perversely human and fallible
—— Morag MacInnes , Tablet, *Novel of the Week*The Testaments cements Aunt Lydia as one of the most fascinatingly monstrous anti-heroes in fiction
—— Abigail Chandler , SciFiNow‘Reminds us of the vital connection between words and power and how important it is to validate women’s words in particular
—— Susan Watkins , Morning StarBut the biggest name, with the year’s biggest book, is Margaret Atwood: her Handmaid’s Tale sequel The Testaments
—— GuardianThe biggest publishing event of the year
—— Marta Bausells , ELLEFor my money, the single most exciting publishing event of the year
—— BooksellerOne of the most eagerly awaited books of the year
—— Daily ExpressOne of the year’s big novels will undoubtedly be Margaret Atwood’s sequel to The Handmaid’s Tale, The Testaments
—— The TimesIt will be one of the literary events of the year
—— VogueWe'll be poring over The Handmaid's Tale for the 100th time in readiness
—— Good HousekeepingThe hoopla around the launch of Margaret Atwood's The Testaments is more reminiscent of the unveiling of an iPhone or something Pokemon related than that of a mere book
—— Johanna Thomas-Corr , ObserverTuesday was not merely Tuesday but Testaments Day, and the Capital Testaments Town
—— Hannah Betts , Daily TelegraphLast week's release of Atwood's sequel, The Testaments, made the last Harry Potter launch look like a wet November afternoon...a truly dazzling literary feat that -- blessed be the fruit -- entirely lives up to the hope and the hype... Atwood's particular genius is pushing and pushing at sexist tropes until they reach their grotesque but ultimately logical conclusion
—— Ceri Radford , IndependentTaylor Swift would kill for this kind of drama... Now, to read it
—— Alice Jones , i paperSpoiler discretion and a ferocious non-disclosure agreement prevent any description of who, how, why and even where. So this: it’s terrifying and exhilarating
—— Judges of the Booker Prize , GuardianTerrifying and exhilarating
—— Peter Florence, Booker Prize judge , GuardianAtwood’s musings on power and the patterns of history [is] as incisive as ever
—— Justine Jordon , Guardian, *Books of the Year*Undeniably page-turning stuff
—— Robbie Millen and James Marriot , The Times, *Books of the Year*A publishing sensation
—— Woman & HomeThe perfect escapist pleasure
—— Hallie Rubenhold, winner of the Baillie Gifford Prize 2019 , GuardianPage-turning stuff
—— The TimesCanada's visionary
—— MonocleA delicious page-turner
—— New ScientistA gripping novel with a satisfying conclusion
—— Charlotte Heathcote , Daily MirrorThe Testamnets is a cracking sequel to Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale and a timely warning about the lengths to which a patriarchal culture will go to control female sexuality
—— Alison Flood , Sunday TelegraphA superb and suspenseful expose of misogyny and the moral ambiguity at the heart of a fanatical regime
—— Martin Chilton, Olivia Petter and Ceri Radford , Independent, *Books of the Decade*[A] rare combination of a rollicking thriller with major political nous told one of our greatest living writers. Essential
—— Den of Geek, *Books of the Year*An era-defining masterpiece
—— Waterstones.comThe Testaments… lived up to the hype
—— Anne Carter , Daily Express, *Books of the Year*Superbly written and masterfully constructs the regime of Gilead more than its predecessor was able to
—— Will Evans , ExeposeThe extraordinary Margaret Atwood... she's fabulous'
—— Hillary Clinton , Stylist[A] compelling story
—— Jane Shilling , Daily MailAtwood's sequel shines with all the acuity and brilliance of the original, whilst continuing the story with flair and modern insight
—— Alice Manning , NouseThere is no language I could use to express the emotion and beauty behind Margaret Atwood's words. Her work takes you on a journey of emotion - whether you are ready to fight, be kind, be vulnerable, stay strong or simply be, she takes you there
—— Elisabeth MossThrilling, a meditation on courage which asks us to consider what our own response might be were we forced to choose between meek complicity and rebellion at risk of death
—— Madeleine Davies, Church TimesShe's taken our times and made us wise to them
—— Ali SmithInspiring and deeply disturbing
—— Nicola Sturgeon