Author:Anthony Trollope

Doctor Thorne was considered by Trollope to be the best of his works – a profound examination of the relationship between money and love, as it shifts away from the city of Barchester to a more rural setting.
Frank Gresham is bankrupt and in love. Unfortunately, the woman he loves, Mary Thorne, is illegitimate and broke. Frank's overbearing mother is against the match, insisting that Frank marry a wealthy heiress. Meanwhile, Doctor Thorne, Mary's uncle, knows a secret that could change everything - Mary is about to inherit a considerable fortune. But he wants the young lovers to make their decision unburdened by the knowledge. Will Frank succumb to family pressure, or go with his heart?
‘The book is a testament to Trollope’s belief in decency as a guide to living, and I think we are made all the better for it’ Julian Fellows
Literary wizardry and hilarious digs… Entertaining twists, flirtations, jiltigs, broken hearts… Wicked!
—— Val Hennessy , Daily MailDoctor Thorne has the best plot - seduction, murder, families ruined by drink and debt - and, in the eponymous doctor, the most sympathetic and human of all Trollope's heroes
—— GuardianOne would be hard put to name a more enjoyable Victorian novelist than Anthony Trollope
—— Washington PostWhy did Freud bother? This is so much better, and truer
—— Daily TelegraphThere is wonderful comedy in Doctor Thorne… The book is a testament to Trollope’s belief in decency as a guide to living, and I think we are made all the better for it.
—— Julian Fellowes , Radio TimesSmith is the brightest spark in a recent explosion of female novelists taking dizzying risks with form and voice . . . most contemporary male authors feel Jurassic by comparison.
—— MetroRich, funny and moving. Smith's writing really catches fire
—— Financial TimesDazzling
—— IndependentThis warm, funny book deserves to be read at least one-and-a-half times
—— Honor Clerk , SpectatorRadical, dazzling . . . Those writers making doomy predictions about the death of the novel should read Smith's re-imagined novel/s, and take note of the life it contains
—— IndependentMs. Smith's writing is inventive and delighted. She cannot help being exuberant
—— New York TimesInventive, playful, compassionate. An immensely enjoyable read
—— Daily ExpressI was utterly transported by Ali Smith's How to Be Both, a novel built from two stories that speak across six centuries. I'm about to read it for the fourth time
—— Helen Macdonald , Irish TimesSmith is dazzling in her daring. Her inventive power pulls you through, gasping, to the final page
—— ObserverSmith can make anything happen, which is why she is one of our most exciting writers today
—— Daily TelegraphShe's a genius, genuinely modern in the heroic, glorious sense
—— Alain de BottonSmith's fervent, vital, incantatory prose is entirely her own . . . How to be both reads as if she has summoned words from some region of the unconscious and released them in a trance
—— Joanna Kavenna , ProspectUtterly contemporary and vividly historical
—— Holly Williams , The IndependentSmith has created a stunning work that is as rewarding as it is challenging
—— The ListOne of the things she does so well, and that is particularly evident in 'How to Be Both,' is the way she can create an extremely sophisticated, complex, multileveled novel that reads beautifully
—— Erica WagnerA marvellous exploration of what it means to look, then look again. Spiralling and twisting stories suggest the ways in which we can transcend walls and barriers - not only between people but between emotions, art forms and historical periods. It is a jeu d'esprit about a girl coming of age and coming to terms with her mother's death, a ghosting of a Renaissance fresco painter in a 21st-century frame and an exhortation to do the twist.
—— Sarah Churchwell , New Statesman Books of the Year 2014A revelation. It blasts the doors open for the novel form and in a Woolf-like way makes all things possible. I imagine it will be one of those rare books that changes the way writers write novels
—— Jackie Kay , ObserverAli Smith's novels soar higher every time and How to be both doesn't disappoint
—— Julie Myerson , ObserverBrilliant. No one combines experimentalism and soulfulness like Ali Smith
—— Craig Taylor , ObserverOne of the most intelligent, inventive, downright impressive writers working anywhere in the world today. In Ali Smith we have a writer whose dazzling sophistication will surely be celebrated, studied and argues over hundreds of years after we're gone
—— Nick Barley , The ScotsmanAli Smith is a master of language. Vigorous, vivid writing that is Ali Smith incarnate
—— Alice Thompson , HeraldIngeniously conceived, gloriously inventive
—— NPRDizzyingly ambitious . . . endlessly artful, creating work that feels infinite in its scope and intimate at the same time. [A] swirling panoramic
—— AtlanticBrilliant . . . the sort of death-defying storytelling acrobatics that don't seem entirely possible
—— Washington PostHaving read this now twice, in both directions so to speak, I've decided - and I do not write this flippantly - that Ali Smith is a genius
—— Susan McCallum , LA Review of BooksApproaches the world as only a novel can. The book moves not so much in a straight line as in a twisting helix pattern . . . delivers the heat of life and the return of beauty in the face of loss
—— Kenneth Miller , Everyday EbookA unique conversation between past and present
—— Milwaukee JournalWildly inventive . . . lyrical, fresh
—— Bustle Magazine