Author:Susannah Waters
Two young people against the world . . .
Tammy's kitchen table is tilting.
Her house is sinking into the ground, and the sun just won't stop shining.
But no one seems to notice.
In Alaska, things are changing fast: the permafrost is melting, temperatures are soaring, and the snow doesn't come until Christmas.
When Tammy's cousin George disappears, it is Tammy who discovers him, hiding away from the world. As their strange, erotic connection intensifies, it becomes clear that George is involved in something terrible and dangerous ...
Susannah Waters' atmospheric tale of a young girl obsessed with the symptoms of global warming is set on a stunning landscape that highlights what we stand to lose. It tells of the passion between two young people who refuse to sit and watch the planet die.
Now at last a highly literate, deeply read cavalry officer shows one the nature of horse-borne warfare.
—— Patrick O'BrianMallinson's descriptions of what it's like to be on campaign are as compelling, vivid and plausible as in any war novel I've ever read.
—— Daily Telegraph[Mallinson is] the heir to Patrick O'Brian and C.S. Forester
—— ObserverIn Hervey, Mallinson has a character worthy of comparison with Forester's young Hornblower ... And as always there is a splendid backdrop of action.
—— PunchConsistently inventive, evocative and uncompromising. Haunting is a word much overused, but Lark and Termite is exactly that: a novel whose elegant lingering images are hard to shake from the memory. This is a glowing, powerful and immensely readable paean to the power of family
—— IndependentJayne Anne Phillips's intricate, deeply felt new novel reverberates with echoes of Faulkner, Woolf, Kerouac, McCullers and Michael Herr's war reporting, and yet it fuses all these wildly disparate influences into something incandescent and utterly original
—— Michiko Kakutani , New York TimesAn intense tale of love, loss and the bond of family that survive, almost miraculously, over time and space... What could have been a fairly conventional story... is transformed by Phillips into something extraordinary
—— Neel Mukherjee , The Times'A moving meditation on the redemptive power of family and love'
—— ObserverPhillip's writing is distinctive, audacious and powerful
—— Daily TelegraphRemarkable. It is a strange and joyous book which will yield much to the patient reader
—— Elis Ni Dhuibhne , Irish TimesLark and Termite, Phillips' fourth novel, has high expectations to live up to. That it meets, and even surpasses, such expectations is only one of its many achievements
—— Angel Gurria-Quintana , Financial Times'A richly textured novel with a wondrous story at its heart about the many permutations of love'
—— Sunday Heraldcompulsive, innovative, challenging
—— Lesley McDowell , Independent on SundayA moving meditation on the redemptive power of family and love.
—— Sarah Churchwell , ObserverThe voices and structures are remarkable
—— Meaghan Delahunt , The ScotsmanTender story
—— Angel Gurria-Quintana , Financial TimesWith its almost mystical exploration of love in all its forms, this is a tender portrayal of a family that proves unsinkable
—— Elizabeth Buchan , The Sunday TimesPhillips's characters...are alive and intimately rendered; their warmth suffuses the novel like low-burning embers
—— Eimear Nolan , Irish TimesCompelling... utterly engaging... for anyone whose interest in his subjects is great to enough to bear their unflinching portrayal The Kindly Ones is an essential novel
—— Chris Power , The TimesIt's an amazing picture of evil, wonderfully written (and very well translated from the original French by Charlotte Mandell), and left me feeling as though I had supped with the damned
—— Jane Knight , The Times