Author:Joanna Trollope

'Pacy, absorbing and compassionate' Daily Mail
'Brilliantly perceptive' Daily Telegraph
'An important novel' Evening Standard
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Will a journey into the past lose them more than they gain?
Nathalie and David have been good and dutiful children to their parents, and now, grown-up, with their own families, they are still close to one another. Brother and sister.
Except that they aren't - brother and sister that is.They were both adopted, when their loving parents, found that they couldn't have children themselves. And up until now it's never mattered.
But suddenly, Nathalie discovers a deep need to trace her birth parents and is insisting that David makes the same journey. And through this, both learn one of the hardest lessons of all, that sometimes, the answers to who we are and where we come from can be more difficult than the questions ...
This is an emotional and thought-provoking novel about who we are and where we come from is insightful and prescient, perfect for fans of Elizabeth Noble, Erica James and Amanda Prowse.
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Readers love Brother & Sister:
'5 stars'
'Kept me really interested all the way through'
'Another Joanna Trollope winner'
'Very entertaining and thought provoking'
Pacy, absorbing and compassionate
—— Daily MailBrilliantly perceptive
—— Daily TelegraphAn important novel
—— Evening StandardHer prodigious flair for illuminating emotional situations guarantees the appeal of Trollope's work... immediate and engrossing
—— The Good Book GuideDeliciously readable
—— The TimesNo one is better at observing and reporting changes in relationships and family dynamics than Joanna Trollope
—— Daily ExpressImpossible to put down. Engagingly poignant and charmingly quirky ... Larsen is an accomplished writer, but he's also a hugely gifted illustrator ... It's a genius debut.
—— Daily MailReif Larsen's debut novel combines meticulous eccentricity with an amazingly broad appeal ... the book is a thing of beauty in itself... TS's voice - and scientific pencil - enchant the reader ... TS's journey - towards forgiveness, understanding, adulthood, love - is a familiar one, but the views are spectacular.
—— GuardianWe believe in Spivet because Larsen gives us so much that is elegant and even pretty to look at. The book is beautifully produced with drawings and maps, yet the account of the train journey in this attractively naïve voice would be admirable even if it were not framed and accompanied by sketches
—— TLSIt has the makings of a cult classic...a deliciously ambitious book, a confident blast of ideas - and a beautiful object
—— Time OutHighly entertaining journey...Larsen will go on great things
—— IndependentSomething very special...pure genius
—— Sarah Broadhurst , The Booksellera mind-bending journey into the strange world of Spivet [...] Magical
—— Metrothe real star of the show is Reif Larson, a first time American novelist...Some of the sly coming-of-age humour is reminiscent of Huckleberry Finn, but it is also very much a modern novel
—— Sally Cousins , Sunday TelegraphAn endearing and original coming-of-age story
—— Margaret Reynolds , The TimesA wilfully original and diverting book, full of carefully penned ephemera.
—— Tim Adams , ObserverThe tale of map-obsessed outcast TS Spivet is captivating but it's the intricate illustrations - from the temperamental family toaster to the trajectory of his father's whiskey sips - that make this a rewardingly unique read.
—— ShortlistLarsen's achievement is to have created a quirky, engaging, painfully vulnerable hero - not to mention a book that's truly lovely to look at, heavily illustrated throughout with examples of T.S.'s prize-winning maps and charts.
—— Daily MailLarsen's debut is engaging... plenty of intelligent perceptions, and a generous smattering of Spivet's drawings
—— Phil Baker , Sunday TimesThe Selected Works of TS Spivet is a joy; a colourful feast of a book... few [books are] as bold as refreshing as Reif Larsen's debut... The account of [Spivet's] adventure is engrossing and full of allusions to classic American literature... There's a lovely hand-crafted quality to the book, and even in paperback form it is a beautiful object
—— David Evans , Independent on Sunday, Christmas round upYou know it ends in death, and so do Malouf's haunted protagonists, but this telling, at once unfussy and wonderfully poetic, breathes warm life into a great epic
—— James Smart , GuardianBreathtaking skill...an extraordinary emotional charge.
—— Colm Toibin , Guardian, Christmas round upA finely honed, writerly and wise revisiting of one of the most famous episodes in The Iliad, when Priam the King of Troy goes to bring home the body of his dead son Hector. No-one in prose has managed to better Malouf's imaginative recreation of the Homeric world.
—— Robert Crawford , Sunday Herald, Christmas round upa potent new yarn... Beautifully written in simple language freighted with meaning, Ransom explores a king's impulse to act as a mourning father.
—— James Urquhart , Financial Times