Author:Joy Wilkinson

‘I am an expert on witchcraft, Doctor, but I wish to learn more. Before you die, I want answers.’
The TARDIS lands in the Lancashire village of Bilehurst Cragg in the 17th century, and the Doctor, Ryan, Graham and Yaz soon become embroiled in a witch trial run by the local landowner. Fear stalks the land, and the arrival of King James I only serves to intensify the witch hunt.
But the Doctor soon realises there is something more sinister than paranoia and superstition at work. Tendrils of living mud stir in the ground and the dead lurch back to horrifying life as an evil alien presence begins to revive. The Doctor and her friends must save not only the people of Bilehurst Cragg from the wakening forces, but the entire world
[All About Sarah] moves impressively from the chaos and noise of love, to silence and solitude, like a spun coin settling.
—— John Self , ObserverA story of desire and desolation.
—— Kim Willsher , GuardianA brief, intense read... compulsive... seductive prose.
—— Lara Feigel , GuardianThere are shades of Duras, Nabokov, and Barthes in the intensely living heart of this magnificent novel.
—— L'ExpressImpressively written and structured... Above all, the novel is memorable for its unflinchingly extreme treatment of romantic love
—— Times Literary SupplementDiscover what a fine writer Murakami is with this engrossing examination of a male mid-life crisis... He enthrallingly teases out the risks, culminating in a headily sensual finale
—— Time OutA beautiful, atmospheric novel sustained by Murakami's flair for philosophical mediation at its most human
—— Irish TimesA wise and beautiful book.
—— The New York Times Book ReviewA probing meditation on human fragility, the grip of obsession, and the impenetrable, erotically charged enigma that is the other.
—— The New York TimesBrilliant. . . . A mesmerizing new example of Murakami's deeply original fiction.
—— The Baltimore SunLovely, deceptively simple. . . . A novel of existential romance.
—— San Francisco ChronicleHis most deeply moving novel.
—— The Boston GlobeMesmerizing. . . . This is a harrowing, a disturbing, a hauntingly brilliant tale.
—— The Baltimore SunA fine, almost delicate book about what is unfathomable about us.
—— The Philadelphia InquirerPortrayed in a fluid language that veers from the vernacular . . . to the surprisingly poetic.
—— San Francisco Examiner & ChronicleMurakami has once again produced a perfect gem
—— Good Book GuideMurakami weaved his mesmeric story-telling power once again with this new book…but still bearing the unmistakable purity of prose, economy of expression and simplicity of style that characterise his writing
—— BayA mysterious story about friendship, heartbreak and confronting the past, this book is surreal, existential and, therefore, classic Murakami
—— Dan Lewis , Travel GuideThe tale is as absorbing as the prose is beautiful
—— Good Book GuideThis is classic Murakami, an isolated character struggling to make his way through a world both deceptively simple and utterly fantastical, his story told through prose infused with all the beauty and meaning of a Kyoto tea ceremony
—— Freya McClements , Irish TimesHis versatility and ability to craft a story is spellbinding… Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage is a fine story that held my attention until the end.
—— Yomi Segun Steven , NudgeLoneliness, sexual ambiguity and emotional repression- the perfect recipe for a novel that put Murakami back on my list of unputdownable authors
—— John Kampfner , ObserverKafkaesque, unusual and packed with sex and confusion, this is high-end prose… Murakami is remarkably prolific… A weird and very wonderful descent into the madness of contemporary Tokyo.
—— Paul Critcher , GeographicalNolan's narrator rips and picks at the threads and scabs of desire, hedonism and self-worth... in this searing first novel, Nolan is holding up a fantastically intense mirror to her protagonist and letting us make up our own mind about whether or not we will look away.
—— Tara Joshi , QuietusThere are flashes of brilliance throughout, reminiscent of John Berger.
—— Stephanie Sy-Quia , Times Literary SupplementActs of Desperation creates an immersive experience of toxic romance through a suffocating and addictive narrative.
—— New StatesmanPainful, sharp and absorbing.
—— Susie Mesure , iA reflection on compulsion, addiction and what it's like to exist as a young woman in a world that is hostile to you. Read the first page and you won't be able to stop.
—— Irish TimesNolan...stakes out thrilling new territory in an intense, unflinching novel that is always intelligent and utterly unafraid of ugliness.
—— Claire Lowdon , Spectator, *Books of the Year*A devastating stripping back of the gendered and politicised conditions that shape desire, a revelation of the unnerving ways we are made vulnerable to others in unequal systems. Its crisp, knowing prose is unparalleled, its anger remarkable.
—— Anahit Behrooz , Skinny, *Books of the Year*Nolan's intelligent, elegant first novel, a gripping portrait of love turned toxic.
—— Daily TelegraphThe star feature of Nolan's narration is her ability to cut through received ideas about women, relationships and even rape. Her headlong, fearless prose, feels like salt wind on cracked lips. You wince and you thrill.
—— Claire Lowdon , Sunday TimesA raw read of vulnerability, desperation, and most definitely a new voice in fiction
—— Chloe Brown , CosmopolitanA thrilling read...if you want a visceral, honest, unputdownable summer read then this is it. You'll devour it in a day.
—— Stylist, *Summer Reads of 2022*A very elegant novel, with coercive control at the core. She has such a strong voice and not a sentence is extraneous
—— Emma Frost, author of BUSY BEING FREE , iI read this in one go... I found it raw, honest, brutal and real.
—— Lykke Li , ObserverWritten with acerbic style and wit, this is an intoxicatingly good look at romantic obsession, delusion and desire.
—— iBeautifully written…and the short chapters keep things moving at an addictively fast pace. Most importantly, it’s shamelessly real
—— Crack






