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Back Trouble
Back Trouble
Jan 13, 2026 1:30 AM

Author:Clare Chambers,Stephen Leask

Back Trouble

Brought to you by Penguin.

From the highly-acclaimed author of SMALL PLEASURES - longlisted for the Women's Prize for Fiction 2021

On the brink of forty, newly single with a failed business, Philip thought he'd reached an all-time low.

It only needed a discarded chip on a South London street to lay him literally flat. So, bedbound and bored, Philip naturally starts to write the story of his life.

But between the mundane catalogue of seaside holidays and bodged DIY, broken relationships and unspoken truths, more surprises are revealed, both comic and touching, than Philip or his family ever bargained for. Even, perhaps, a happy ending...

Praise for Clare Chambers:

'Smart, astute, and very funny' Daily Mail

'Gorgeous... If you're looking for something escapist and bittersweet, I could not recommend more' Pandora Sykes on SMALL PLEASURES

'Chambers' eye for undemonstrative details achieves a Larkin-esque lucidity' Guardian

'A funny and moving story with a great deal of style' Daily Express

© Clare Chambers 2001 (P) Penguin Audio 2021

Reviews

A funny and moving story with a great deal of style

—— Sunday Telegraph

A funny book which slips in some acute and painful obervations on the side

—— The Times

A great read

—— Time Out

The characters are wonderfully written and I loved escaping to the gossipy world of the film set

—— Good Housekeeping, Book of the Month

Boyd keeps the plot racing along, yet for all the twists, the real delight is in William Boyd's wry portrait of a bygone age . . . Boyd's usual sure touch is evident throughout this tender, gently comic work

—— Independent

One of our best contemporary storytellers. . . Trio embraces comedy, tragedy and redemption. It succeeds impressively because of its dramatic, often sensational, revelations

—— Spectator

I am a huge fan of William Boyd and the tender way he writes about the flaws and frailties of his characters. Trio is his best novel in years

—— Red, The Best Books to Read this October

Reading William Boyd's Trio is like shrugging on a worn leather jacket on the first brisk morning of autumn: cosy but cool . . . He has enormous fun with the worlds - and egos - of page and screen

—— The Times

Enormous fun . . . Boyd's characters are vibrant, his prose elegant, comedy excellent: the result is a book that's compassionate and compelling

—— Tatler

Boyd's writing is as fluent as ever but it's the ideas pulsing beneath the surface that distinguish Trio

—— Financial Times

Trio is an intricate set of variations on the idea of alternative selves, well beyond the title's trio, unobtrusively elegant in its formal beauty

—— New Statesman, Books of the Year

Sending an affably satiric shimmer over the ceaseless rewrites, grotesque miscastings and behind-the-scenes chicanery, William Boyd simultaneously explores deeper issues of duplicity and divided personality

—— Sunday Times, Best Fiction Books of the Year

The spring-loaded poems of Cheryl's Destinies foreground questions about art and authenticity, belief and make-believe, the inescapable presence of history and the contingent self in crisis ... many of the poems in Cheryl's Destinies vibrate not only forwards but backwards as Sexton continues to unlock the possibilities of poetic form.

—— Maria Johnston , The Times Literary Supplement

Enchanting and intriguing, Matrix absorbs the reader into the medieval period without compelling them to depart entirely from the present

—— iNews

It's a bold, luminous tale that captivates from first to last.

—— Mail on Sunday

A robust and pleasingly strange slice of historical fiction

—— Times, Best Fiction Books of 2021

Lauren Groff's Matrix is just marvellous; vivid and vibrant, it hums with the lives of those contained within the convent walls, as Marie becomes the ambitious and canny hub at the heart of this female utopia.

—— Daily Mail

No doubt a mini-series beckons

—— Catholic Herald

Groff offers a world that is rapturous, rapacious, ecstatic, profane; a novel of seismic revelations.

—— Eley Williams

Matrix explores the story of Marie de France, a young woman sent to languish in a struggling convent that she begins to transform through her own leadership. Both epic and intimate, this sweeping novel explores questions of female ambition, creativity and passion with electrifying prose and sparkling wit. A propulsive, captivating read.

—— Brit Bennett, author of The Vanishing Half

Matrix is alive with lust and glory. In the incandescent Marie de France - visionary, cantankerous and uncowed by the constraints of her sex - Groff paints a portrait of sisterhood that shines out of the past and into the lives of women today.

—— C Pam Zhang, author of Booker-longlisted How Much of These Hills is Gold

Animated with sensual detail on every page and filled with lush, gripping storytelling that cuts to the bone, MATRIX resonates right into the present moment. I never thought I would find myself longing to be a medieval nun but Groff is a worker of wonders. This book is a ferocious joy

—— Madeline Miller

Lushly textured and uniquely vivid, Matrix settles itself on your mind like a dream or vision - it's absolutely stunning

—— Sophie Mackintosh

What a book. Perfectly done. I adored it

—— Max Porter

It's as brightly lit as an illuminated manuscript and would make the most perfect Christmas present imaginable

—— Naomi Alderman

Full of sharp sensory detail, it's balm and nourishment for brain, heart and soul

—— Guardian

Matrix takes the mysterious life of the late 12th-century poet - known today for her romantic lais - and runs with it . . . Groff explores themes of domination, death and desire in compelling (if at times, stomach-turning) detail

—— Financial Times, Best Books of the Year

However, like Groff's earlier novel, this becomes a vivid, immersive and at times wild account of female agency

—— Sunday Times

In Lauren Groff's hands, the tale of a medieval nunnery is must-read fiction

—— Washington Post

A marvelously told story of devotion, desire and ambition in the heart of a female utopia

—— Daily Mail

Matrix is another masterpiece from a writer whom few at this point can best

—— The Atlantic

Through Marie, Groff explores how a society's religious and gendered constraints can be turned on their head to create a utopia

—— The New Yorker

[A]n electric reimagining . . . feminist, sensual, magisterial, de France's saga is one of hardship and triumph, an unforgettable character whose far-seeing vision and devotion to the nuns in her community enable them to transcend what threatens to erase and silence them

—— Oprah Magazine

Matrix focuses less on Marie the author and more on Marie the abbess - and if you think that doesn't sound like the obvious angle for a fun and engaging story, you underestimate the scope of Groff 's imagination and talent

—— The Daily Telegraph

In these incandescent pages, Groff reverently imagines her way into the life and lore of Marie de France . . . Woven from Groff's trademark ecstatic sentences and brimming with spiritual fervor, Matrix is a radiant work of imagination and accomplishment

—— Esquire

Thrilling and heartbreaking, Groff crafts an electric work of historical fiction

—— TIME, Most Anticipated Book of the Fall

A transportive and meditative tale that will swallow you up from the very start

—— Newsweek

Groff, a premier stylist . . . .continues to grow, taking on a medieval foremother's story in her latest novel. The voice she finds for Marie de France . . . .will hold readers fast as the exiled Angevin royal becomes abbess of a convent, leading her charges through historic upheavals

—— LA Times

Feverishly exhilarating stuff

—— Chicago Tribune

With her unparalleled gift for sumptuous, sublime prose, Groff paints an engrossing portrait of a woman who, despite living in a world bound by constraints, experiences a life rich with passion and creativity. Surrounded by a supportive sisterhood, Marie uses strength and ingenuity to subvert the oppression of the patriarchy

—— Atlanta Journal Constitution

Utterly absorbing

—— Vogue

Splendid with rich description and period vocabulary, this courageous and spin-tingling novel shows an incredible range for Groff (FLORIDA, 2018), and will envelop readers fully in Marie's world, interior and exterior, all senses lit up. It is both a complete departure and an easy-to-envision tale of faith, power, and temptation.

—— Booklist

In this bildungsroman about the real-life 12th-century poet Marie de France, a teenage Marie is exiled to a blighted Benedictine nunnery, where she finds strength and power as a prioress

—— Vanity Fair

Powerful, sapphic historical novel . . . Richly realized with historical details that don't overwhelm

—— BuzzFeed

Readers will recognize her stunning prose and grand, mythic perspective. . . . in a tale that feels both ancient and urgent, as holy as it is deeply human

—— Entertainment Weekly

The pages are almost completely devoid of men - seen, but not heard - with Groff using poetic, melodic and yet fierce writing to breathe volume into themes of power, ambition and success from the perspective of women

—— Press Association

[A] propulsive, enchanting, and emotionally charged read

—— Washington Independent Review of Books

A clever spin on the story of Marie de France

—— Bustle

I loved this accomplished piece of storytelling. So much so, I added it to my Booker wish list at the last minute, a wish not fulfilled, of course

—— A Life In Books

Matrix is a rich, beautifully written novel about ambition and desire, and also witchy separatist medieval nuns

—— Vox

Mesmerizing and inspiring

—— Newsday

Medieval life can seem far from our modern grasp, but Groff vividly describes the daily workings of the convent, from prayers to practical chores. She has done her research and it shows in the rich details she provides of working the fields, preparing meals, governing novices . . . magical, a beautiful evocation of what women can achieve and what they can mean to each other

—— NY Journal of Books

[A] feminist foray into a medieval nunnery that is stunning in its labyrinthine artistry and sensual tracing of life as lived during the era of the poet Marie de France and the legendary Eleanor of Aquitaine

—— Lit Hub

Must-read

—— HuffPost

A[n] artful writer, Groff has no need for fantastic artifice to construct a world without men. She . . . gives us an extraordinary protagonist . . . Anyone who has read Groff's previous novels and stories knows that this author's greatest virtue is her economy of prose. A disciplined writer . . . If "Eleanor's best currency is story," that goes double for Groff . . . Groff's "Matrix" simultaneously transports us to a backward world that once was and the grim future that seems inevitable. And all this through the eyes of a group of extraordinary women who decline to live lives of quiet desperation

—— Gainesville Sun

[A] transcendently beautiful novel with sensuality, religious ecstasy, gender and power explorations, and a fair bit of tasteful gore. It's surprisingly delicious to read fiction about a historical figure we know so little about

—— Shondaland

I'm on page 17 and now nothing else matters . . . Once you have this book in your hands I feel certain you too will be consumed

—— Sarah Jessica Parker

[D]reamy prose . . . At its heart, the book's message is simple: joy can exist in darkness

—— Popsugar

Richly imaginative

—— AP

[A] relentless exhibition of Groff's freakish talent . . . an unforgettable book . . . ecstatic, refulgent, God-struck, heretical

—— USA Today

[A] creative, intelligent work that will last

—— Boston Globe

The real Marie de France may continue to elude historians but the speculative fiction in Matrix combine to produce an unfailingly absorbing novel

—— TLS

An uplifting novel in its own unique way, and up there with Groff's best work

—— iNews

Matrix forms an intensely focused character study, but also succeeds as a probing exploration of female power

—— Literary Review

A beautiful and beguiling novel that transports the listener utterly and completely to another world

—— Irish Examiner

Against a convincingly filthy and precarious medieval backdrop, Marie is a figure of dazzling complexity

—— The Times
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