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Can't Wait to Get to Heaven
Can't Wait to Get to Heaven
Nov 6, 2025 12:40 PM

Author:Fannie Flagg

Can't Wait to Get to Heaven

Life is the strangest thing. One minute, Mrs Elner Shimfissle is up a tree, picking figs to make jam, and the next thing she knows, she is off on a strange adventure, running into people she never expected to see again, in the unlikeliest of places. Meanwhile, Elner's highly strung niece Norma takes to her bed, before embarking on a brand new career; Elner's neighbour Verbena turns to the Bible; her truck-driver friend, Luther Griggs, runs his eighteen-wheeler into a ditch; a dark secret emerges from the past - and the entire town is left wondering, 'What's life all about anyway?' Except for Tot Whooten, whose main concern is that the end of the world might come before she can collect her social security.

A plea for honest doubt and humanity in an over-certain world, Can't Wait to Get to Heaven is further proof that Fannie Flagg was put on this earth to write.

Reviews

Good, old-fashioned sentimentality... Dialogue and witty asides... [And] aphorisms galore, many so good they make you snort out loud

—— Observer

A born storyteller

—— New York Times

Funny and utterly charming

—— Chicago Tribune

A warm and funny tribute to small-town America ...quirky Floridian dialogue comes thick and fast

—— Eve magazine

[A] distinct blend of insight and humour

—— Denver Post

Deeply affecting... Kennedy strips her characters emotionally bare… Serious Sweet portrays intense lives of quiet desperation: it is a novel about hope and muted courage and, at the end of the day, a very tentatively experienced optimism.

—— Hannah Beckerman , Observer

A. L. Kennedy's eighth novel is a profoundly moving, often funny, and at points rending depiction of two good people. Serious Sweet is about the heroism of decency; albeit damaged decency... Kennedy is not one of our finest writers simply because of the quality of her prose: she is because of the moral profundity of her work.

—— Stuart Kelly , Scotsman

This is a bold, cinematic novel... Parts of it are terrifically funny.

—— Herald

A genuinely stirring love story.

—— Mail on Sunday

Her flair for describing feelings and relationships makes this an engaging window into the messy minds of Londoners and her commentary on the city rings true.

—— Susannah Butter , Evening Standard

Determinedly and impressively intellectual… A novel of ideas that is deft enough never to be didactic because it asks more question than it answers.

—— Lara Feigel , Guardian

This is an author with a proven ability to see – truly see – and whose prose can fire like gunshots across the page.

—— Rebecca Swirsky , New Statesman

[Like] Sleepless in Seattle, respun by James Joyce, and set within a London on the precipice of Brexit.

—— Culture Trip

Her best book in years.

—— Justine Jordan , Guardian

Uniquely moving love story.

—— Jess Denham , Independent

Kennedy is never less than illuminating.

—— Susan Mansfield , Scotsman

[Kennedy is] witty, sharp, almost too intelligent and a bit provocative.

—— Eileen Battersby , Irish Times

An uplifting tale of the triumph of niceness over nastiness.

—— Adam Lively , Sunday Times

A writer of exquisite precision… A public novel, angrily political… Expressing her idea of a writer’s social responsibility so eloquently… Well-suited to Kennedy’s talent and her characteristically oblique and original way of seeing the world.

—— Allan Massie , Yorkshire Post

What sets this novel apart is Kennedy’s physical and emotional sensitivity to both solitude and tenderness.

—— Fiona MacDonald , Methodist Recorder

Absorbing… Serious without being solemn, sweet without being sickly, it’s an elegant tale about the unexpected places where kindness and sympathy can flourish and deepen.

—— Charlotte Heathcote , Express

Kennedy’s comedy is ruthlessly observed – an anti-romance that warms into something moving and profound. It’s also a brilliant portrait of city living.

—— Saga Magazine

Two lonely people go about their day in London in this typically Kennedian and utterly wonderful novel… but they find their way towards each other in an agonising love story that’s all about morality and decency in a careless world… Kennedy is a stand-up comedian, and observational comedy runs through this novel in interior monologues that are heartbreakingly familiar and laugh-out-loud sad. Her sentences are some of the best in modern fiction (there’s a springer spaniel called Hector with “black, bewildered ears… [that] made him look as if he’d recently heard dreadful news and still hadn’t adjusted.”) and reading her prose is like eating those fizzy sweets that are both sweet and sour make you wince at the back of your mouth – then go back for more… It’s gorgeous.

—— Bookseller

Consistently raw and powerful… emotionally exhausting… But there’s a lot to be said for a novel which sets so much store by “affection and tenderness”, and in which the emotional peaks and the possibilities of redemption and renewal are marked by the simple holding of hands.

—— Alastair Mabbott , Herald

Sweetly funny, The Idiot rejects the doctrine of omitting needless words in favour of marvelling…at the complexities of language and communication.

—— Hannah Rosefield , New Statesman

Charming… A gentle coming-of-age novel drawing on Batuman’s time at Harvard in the mid-1990s… It’s in such acute portrayals of early adulthood’s uncertainties that this pleasantly rambling tale leaves its most vivid impression.

—— Alex Dean , Prospect

A delightfully digressive campus novel.

—— Kate Loftus O'Brien , AnOther

There is more than one idiot in this delightful and slyly funny coming-of-age novel... Will strike a chord for any former fresher who felt the same way. (That would be all of us.)

—— Sarra Manning , Red

Batuman, in seemingly writing a novel about nothing, has produced an incredibly complex, accurate and funny novel.

—— Rachael Revesz , Independent

I never want to finish it, so I’m reading it very slowly.

—— Lauren Waterman , ELLE

Every page is thicketed with jokes, riffs, theories of language. It’s a portrait of an intellectual and sentimental education that offers almost unseemly pleasure.

—— Parhul Sehgal , New York Times

Elif Batuman is a real writer, and should be allowed to write whatever the hell she likes.

—— Daniel Soar , London Review of Books

Selin’s deadpan narration is often very funny indeed

—— Leaf Arbuthnot , Sunday Times

This is a capacious book that creates an alternative world

—— Lara Feigel , Guardian

At once clever and clueless, Batuman’s heroine shows us with just how messy it can be to forge a self

—— London Property South

One of the best novels I read all summer... a painstakingly accurate depiction of the balancing act that is student-life. As clever as it is funny, Batuman's debut novel allows us to laugh at our own stupidity, and celebrate our own cluelessness.

—— Varsity

The Idiot... manages the trick of being laugh-out-loud funny while not actually being a comedy. It just observers life, in all its truth and is hilarious for page after page.

—— Patrick Ness , Guardian

I finally read The Idiot by Elif Batuman and everyone is correct, she is clearly a genius

—— White Review, *Books of the Year*
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