Author:Christopher Fowler

Kay Goodwin is a sixteen-year-old boy with a smart mouth and too much imagination. Marooned in the rundown seaside resort of Cole Bay, his life is a horrible comedy of errors that has trapped him in the country's most dismal place at the worst possible time - the early seventies. He dreams of escaping the crumbling pier and the grumbling pensioners, of finding where he is appreciated, but it's the one thing he can't do. Until he discovers a faraway land with characters who are impossibly exotic, but strangely familiar. In the kingdom of Calabash he can have everything he's ever wanted from life. There's only one small problem. Calabash doesn't actually exist.
In an England that's still hungover from the sixties, Kay finds it all too easy to retreat from reality. Everyone in Cole Bay expects him to conform, but Kay is prepared to risk everything to find out what makes him different, what his life really holds, and what will happen if he believes in the impossible...
Christopher Fowler's warm-hearted, dryly comic novel takes place at the most painful point of growing up, when childhood dreams are abandoned for hard truths, and everyone gets one last chance to be free.
With Atomised, you could see that Houellebecq was headed for greatness. With Platform he has attained it. The book is a stunning achievement
—— Evening StandardReading Houellebecq is never deflating; it is, rather, a source of constant inspiration and delight. Would that we could produce his like in England
—— ObserverA brilliant novel
—— Anita BrooknerMichel Houellebecq has put contemporary French literature back on the map in a way not seen since Camus
—— David Sexton , Evening StandardThere is something new and rare here, a genuinely unsettling wit with a terrible tang of truth
—— Sunday TelegraphA highly impressive first novel by Laurence Anholt . . . every reader will be swept into this highly visual world and the drama that develops within it
—— AchukaA thought provoking read perfect for book groups from teenage to adult
—— Evening PostThe Hypnotist unfolds steadily and beautifully, ramping up the fear, tension and hope faced by young black men in 1960s America … filled with heart and history that shocks and educates, but ultimately leaves you believing that, even in the most brutal and unstable environments, however alone you might think you are, there’s still kindness to be discovered
—— Press Association, Children’s Book of the WeekThis fascinating hybrid of paranormal and historical fiction follows Jack, an Irish neurologist with secret hypnotic skills and Pip, a young black farmhand. The pair’s lives merge when Jack relocates to the American South and must face the realities of racial tension as well as come to terms with his own strange powers
—— Buzzfeed.com, 28 YA Books Everyone Should ReadA compelling read . . . a wonderful blend of kitchen sink realism, accurate historical detail and an atmospheric dollop of magical realism . . . it draws you in from the first page and keeps your attention until the last
—— TheBookbag.co.ukSuccessfully captures a country sweltering in prejudice and oppression . . . I think copies of it should stand proudly on the shelves of every history classroom in the country
—— Times Educational SupplementThis is a gripping novel looking at a turbulent period of American history, and not shying away from the difficult and once everyday aspects of racism
—— BooktrustA wonderful book with real heart . . . I can’t recommend it highly enough
—— American Historical Novel SocietyA remarkable story and a thoroughly compelling read which I was unable to put down
—— Carousel MagazineA thrilling cross-over novel that brings us home to mutual respect and love - if there has to be one choice, this is it
—— Devon Life MagazineI loved this moving historical story set in the American Deep South
—— BookClubBox Books of the YearA nod to The Color Purple and Great Expectations, this is a thought provoking read perfect for book groups from teenage to adult
—— Drawing on BooksA powerful evocation of a period of prejudice and injustice rarely covered in fiction for young readers
—— Armadillo Magazine, Editor’s ChoiceThe first thing to say about this book is that it is a very good read. The second is that The Hypnotist tackles some very heavy themes
—— PlanetBooks Australia