Author:Sam North
Relive the magic of ITV’s best loved drama series starring Martin Clunes
Doc Martin arrives in the picture postcard fishing village of Portwenn, Cornwall. Once a high-flying London surgeon, his suddenly developed blood phobia means he has to take a job in a local practice.
But while the Doc’s medical skills are second to none, his bedside manner leaves a lot to be desired. He immediately starts infuriating the locals, none more so than school teacher Louisa Glasson...
The novel's short scenes of decadence and desperation spray across the pages like buckshot - loud and scattered, but still penetrating
—— Time OutRich and often beautiful, brave, engrossing, intelligent, literate, funny and very human . . . I relished this novel - for its compassion, its lyricism and its great human spirit
—— GuardianA diverse yet tautly constructed novel that is evidently the work of a master storyteller. A tremendous novel - both laugh-out-loud hilarious and full of pathos; deftly constructed, affectionate yet disconcerting, and utterly engaging
—— Daily TelegraphTense, exciting, full of energy
—— ObserverMeg Wolitzer writes fluently about the American Dream and whether you should surrender your goals to reality in this wonderful novel
—— StylistI love Meg Wolitzer’s The Interestings because it’s sprawling and beautifully written and it opens at a summer camp. It’s a truly great novel about friendship, and how it deepens and changes over the years
—— David Sedaris , Conde Nast TravellerA breakout book
—— Allison PearsonIf you enjoy the introspective aspects of Virginia Woolf or the American modernity of Jennifer Egan, you’ll love this sweeping, tragicomic novel of ideas
—— PsychologiesOne of those generation-defining America novels that tackles big historical issues
—— Marie ClaireFull of wit
—— Emerald StreetThe wit, intelligence and deep feeling of Wolitzer’s writing are extraordinary and The Interestings brings her achievement, already so steadfast and remarkable, to an even higher level
—— Jeffrey EugenidesMeg Wolitzer’s latest offering promises to be the epic novel of the summer
—— Stella, Sunday TelegraphA wonderful novel, written with warmth and depth of emotion
—— Kate Mosse , The TimesThis is an exhilarating, aerobatic, addictive novel
—— Claire Lowdon , Sunday TimesMeg Wolitzer’s best novel yet
—— William Leith , Evening StandardThe dreamy, criss-crossing narrative proves Wolitzer one of America’s most ingenious and important writers
—— Sunday TelegraphAn engrossing look at life’s twists and turns
—— Woman's WeeklyThe wit, intelligence and deep feeling of Wolitzer’s writing are extraordinary and The Interestings brings her achievement, already so steadfast and remarkable, to an even higher level.
—— JEFFREY EUGENIDESThis is a wonderful book. Intelligent and subtle, it is exquisitely written with enormous warmth and depth of emotion… Wolitzer is an affectionate and clear-sighted observer of human nature
—— Kate Mosse , The TimesMeg Wolitzer proves brilliant at writing normal, unremarkable lives, investing them with just as much detailed attention and humane humour as the lives of the beautiful, the rich and the famous… [She] also pulls off an impressive balancing act, sometimes inhabiting the moment-to-moment present of her characters, and at others times writing with a droll hindsight
—— Holly Williams , Independent on SundayThere are certain authors whose new book you look forward to as though you were about to catch up on news from an old friend. And there are authors whose new book you fall on greedily because you know it will be tartly delicious and satisfy a hunger you didn’t know you had till you read them for the first time. For me, Meg Wolitzer has long been in both of those categories… The Interestings is full of Wolitzer’s trademark pleasures. I love her fearlessness in tackling everything … She has a sly wit and verbal brio which can even make clinical depression entertaining
—— Allison Pearson , Daily Telegraph