Author:C. F. Iggulden

Discover your new favourite fantasy series the epic and spellbinding first instalment in Empire of Salt
'One of the best fantasy novels I've read' 5***** READER REVIEW
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The city of Darien lies at the heart of a dying empire.
Twelve families race for a throne soon to be made vacant - by murder or civil war. Into this fevered, hungry city come six strangers:
An orphan and an old swordsman.
A hunter and a pitiless killer.
A young thief and a cynical chancer.
As the sun sinks the city will know no slumber. For long dormant passions have awoken. Fortunes will be won and lost. Lives will be staked and claimed.
And a story long waiting to be told will catch fire in the telling . . .
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Readers are captivated by EMPIRE OF SALT:
'Enough machinations, conspiracies and controversies to rival Game of Thrones' 5***** Reader Review
'I'm a huge fan of Iggulden, but this takes it to another level' 5***** Reader Review
'A must-read and a very welcome addition to the genre' 5***** Reader Review
A master storyteller
—— Sunday ExpressIggulden is in a class of his own
—— Daily MirrorOne of our finest historical novelists
—— Daily ExpressA stunning debut novel. Blending a deep understanding of character and storytelling examination… the result reminds me of Iris Murdoch… Johnson’s affinity for the natural world is extraordinary
—— Jeff VanderMeer , GuardianEverything Under grabbed me from the first page and wouldn’t let me go. To read Daisy Johnson is to have that rare feeling of meeting an author you’ll read for the rest of your life.
—— Evie WyldEverything Under is a force of nature ... Like Iris Murdoch's 1954 novel Under the Net, Johnson's Man Booker Prize finalist is concerned with language, secrets and the damage wrought by what's left unsaid.
—— Tobias Grey , New York Times Book ReviewImaginative and innovative... there is a spellbinding tension. As the threads move towards a common end, you’re a child who wants to know the magic.
—— Jonathan McAloon , Irish TimesA formally ambitious novel with a thriller’s heart and intimate attention to the power of language.
—— Vanity FairI’m under the spell of an extraordinary book… Everything Under [is] a gift from a wise and empathetic friend who understands the gypsy gift of storytelling – to transcend and enthral.
—— Laura Bailey , VogueA triumph: a novel that feels inexorable, messy and profound all at once.
—— Anna Leszkiewicz , New Statesman[Daisy Johnson’s] first novel confirms not only her talent, but her ambition… Johnson’s dense, begrimed retelling [of the Oedipus myth] hums with an electricity pylon-charge of danger, and her sentences repeatedly flare with startling, visceral coinages.
—— Daily MailInfused with dark fairy tale, Oedipal tragedy and Freudian desire, this is a brambly, atmospheric and immersive tale… Johnson’s [Everything Under] shines in its use of language.
—— Ellen Wiles , Times Literary SupplementA weird and wonderful revisioning of Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex… Johnson writes with a mesmerising blend of the naturalistic and the surreal, spinning physical descriptions of muscular beauty… This is a novel that drives to its tragic outcome with the twisting but unstoppable logic of a river to the sea.
—— Rebecca Abrams , Financial TimesA hybrid of Alexander Trocchi’s 1954 murder-on-a-canal novel Young Adam and Angela Carter at her most witchy and far-out, Everything Under is creative writing of distinction.
—— Ian Thomson , Evening StandardA deeply involving, unsettling novel that pulls the reader into a uniquely eerie yet recognisable world.
—— Sunday TimesJohnson excels at making psychic phenomena feel visceral.
—— ObserverAs readable as it is dazzling, full of unsettling twists and dark revelations
—— Alex Preston , ObserverSurprising, gorgeously written, and profoundly unsettling, this genderfluid retelling of Oedipus Rex will sink into your bones and stay there.
—— Carmen Maria MachadoHypnotic, disquieting and thrilling. A concoction of folklore, identity and belonging which sinks its fangs into the heart of you.
—— Irenosen OkojieEverything Under seeped through to my bones. Reaching new depths hinted at in Fen, language and landscape turn strange, full of creeping horror and beauty. It is precise in its terror, and its tenderness. An ancient myth masterfully remade for our uncertain times.
—— Kiran Millwood HargraveA fantastically dark reinvention of the myth of Oedipus… a complicated but deeply satisfying novel.
—— StylistThis is a thrilling novel… Like Daisy Johnson’s startling debut, the short-story collection Fen, this lyrical, multi-layered novel explores her deep love and understanding of the natural world and shadowy people eking out a living close to it. She writes beautifully and vividly… with a brooding atmosphere that draws the reader into an uncanny and menacing watery world. It is exquisitely written, but very affecting.
—— Rebecca Wallersteiner , LadyExplores femininity, family and identity with a timeline and narrators that eddy and clash like sticks thrown into a river... like a current, it soon carries you away.
—— Natalie Bowen , Scotsman[Daisy Johnson's] first collection Fen drew comparisons to Angela Carter and Graham Swift and there is an otherworldly, folkloric tinge to her inventive first novel although it is set in modern-day, rural England... Beautiful.
—— Alice O'Keeffe , Bookseller *Editor's Choice*Everything Under is an unusual and eerily atmospheric read from new talent Daisy Johnson.
—— Good HousekeepingEncompassing myth, fairy tale and haunting language, Johnson's earthy and timeless depictions of gender and sexuality turn an old tale into something entirely current.
—— New StatesmanImpressive.
—— Daily TelegraphEverything Under is otherworldly and captivating… a book that is as beautifully human as it is delightfully strange.
—— Caught by the RiverBarbed, gripping and marvellously written.
—— Mark Hudson , Tablet, *Summer Reads of 2021*A lovely novel following the author’s usual theme of hope and regret, renewal and contentment
—— Hello!Tyler has the ability to bring character to life in just a few sentences
—— Claire Allfree , MetroAnne Tyler’s astute new novel Clock Dance is fuelled by kindness, kindness that begins tentatively with false starts and blind spots and grows into the extravagant all-encompassing sort
—— Susan Boyt , Financial TimesI loved Clock Dance
—— Cressida Connolly , SpectatorWarmly appealing and sharply observant...combines comic relish with psychological and social shrewdness. Characters pulse with lifelikeness. Dialogue crackles with authenticity. Changes brought about by time are fascinatedly and fascinatingly observed
—— Sunday TimesA moving, often spiky study of relationships and the far-reaching effects of trauma
—— Daily TelegraphA thought-provoking story that resonates with emotional depth
—— Neil Armstrong and Hephzibah Anderson , Mail on Sunday, *Summer reads of 2019*Moshfegh’s characters are often so funny in and about their unhappiness that we don’t want them to escape it, or not yet… My Year of Rest and Relaxation is written in multiple modes at once: comedy and tragedy and farce, blurring into one another, climbing on top of one another.
—— Anne Diebel , London Review of BooksA shocking, hilarious and strangely tender novel.
—— Jenna Rak , Glamour MagazineI love this book. It's funny, I find it intriguing and Moshfegh has a dark voice. I started reading her and thought, 'This sounds like a female Bret Easton Ellis'.
—— Ellie Bamber , StylistEnthralling. The voice is compelling and witty, drawing one into the experience.
—— Shamika Tamhane , Cherwell NewspaperThe black comedy draws you in and the mysteries, twists and turns keep you there.
—— Wendy Bristow , Planet Mindful, *Summer Reads of 2019*Whip-smart and bleakly funny.
—— Chloe Ashby , MonocleThe most inspiring novel of recent years.
—— Eva Wiseman , ObserverDepressing, dystopian, dry and dark, but also strangely comforting and full of the joy of innocent fantasy of withdrawing from a hostile world.
—— Sam Knowles and Sam Waters , NARCMoshfegh's stunning 2018 novel has a haunting ending... [and] relentlessly vicious humour.
—— Gwendolyn Smith , iThis razor sharp satirical novel has achieved near mythical status... [a] compelling and clever take on a female character that isn't afraid to speak her mind
—— GlamourOttessa is one of our newest, most dazzling, daring and outrageous voices in literature
—— Gwendoline Christie , VogueA very compelling read… hilarious and depressing and rage-inducing in equal measures.
—— Valerie O’Riordan , BookmunchAbsorbing.
—— The Week - Novel Of The WeekLyrical, bleakly comic and, ultimately, intensely affecting
—— Stephanie Cross , The LadyIt is a necessary and compelling book, and this year’s must read
—— Anne Enright , GuardianRachel Kushner’s exhaustive research into what goes on within these walls
—— Strong WordsKushner’s high-definition, high-impact prose is as electrifying as it is daring
—— Anthony Cummins , Daily MailThe momentum of the novel resides in its prose, the spring and sass of a voice so vivid it can largely dispense with the mechanics of plot
—— Nat Segnit , Times Literary SupplementA salty and hilarious novel from one of America's best living novelists.
—— Daily TelegraphRachel Kushner's The Mars Room should be a favourite [to win the Man Booker Prize]. If you like your escapism as gritty as it gets, prepare to be hooked by this unflinching account of a female prisoner serving a double life sentence... The Mars Room is rarely easy reading, but the furore of voices and violence and injustice throws you right into the story and keeps you immersed there.
—— Culture WhisperKushner’s novel is a timely reminder that a country’s authoritarian tendencies can be most easily measured by the number of people it deems unworthy of freedom
—— Emily Witt , London Review of BooksRachel Kushner knows how to sniff out a good character.
—— Sunday TimesRachel Kushner’s The Mars Room immerses you in the life of a high-security women’s prison in California, its central character Romy – accused of killing her stalker – both gritty and fragile. This was not a subject I thought would grip me, but in Kushner’s firm hands I was entranced. Much of the book is autobiographical – while never in prison herself, Kushner was the daughter of Beatniks and allowed to roam the dodgier areas of San Francisco as a teenager. The characters range from bullet-headed killers to a well-meaning male teacher whose ambiguities are brilliantly done. Romy’s trans friend Conan, “shoulders as broad as the aisle, and a jawline beard”, is delightfully free of the politically correct, while the style veers excitingly from straight narrative to scribbled lists like whimpers of despair.
—— Adam Thorpe , Times Literary Supplement **Books of the Year 2018**Rachel Kushner's The Mars Room was a hot favourite on this year's Booker shortlist, and it's easy to see why… Kushner's atmospheric writing is compelling to the last.
—— Irish Independent, *The best reads of 2018: Our critics name their top picks*Kushner’s writing is the most marvellous I read this year… time and again I found myself rereading paragraphs of The Mars Room for her perfectly turned sentences, the music of her prose
—— Neil D. A. Stewart , Civilian, **Books of the Year**[A] brilliantly compelling read
—— Sunday Times