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Dust
Dust
Mar 1, 2026 12:59 PM

Author:Hugh Howey

Dust

The much-anticipated final instalment of the Wool trilogy.

'The next Hunger Games.' The Sunday Times

'Thrilling, thought-provoking and memorable ... one of dystopian fiction's masterpieces alongside the likes of 1984 and Brave New World.' Daily Express

________________

In the aftermath of the uprising, the people of Silo 18 are coming to terms with a new order.

Some embrace the change, others fear the unknown; none have control of their fate.

The Silo is still in danger.

There are those set on its destruction.

Jules knows they must be stopped.

The battle has been won.

The war is just beginning.

Reviews

By turns love letter to and critique of language itself, Greek Lessons is a brief yet, in its concision and finesse, lapidary work . . . one of Han's most intimate works

—— Financial Times

In Greek Lessons Kang reaches beyond the usual senses to translate the unspeakable . . . Han Kang turns the well-worn idea of the mind-body disconnect into something fresh and substantial

—— Los Angeles Times

This novel is a celebration of the ineffable trust to be found in sharing language . . . [Han] is an astute chronicler of unusual, insubordinate women

—— The New York Times

Han Kang is a writer like no other. In a few lines, she seems to traverse the entirety of human experience

—— Katie Kitamura

Han Kang's vivid and at times violent storytelling will wake up even the most jaded of literary palates

—— Independent

An elliptical, enigmatic book . . . Han's style creates mystery

—— The Economist

Han Kang's hypnotic Greek Lessons probes the limits of language

—— The Straits Times

Han Kang is what most writers spend their lives trying to be: a fearless, unsentimental teller of human truths . . . Han Kang is a genius

—— Lisa McInerney, author of The Glorious Heresies

Another stunning gem: quiet, sharply faceted, and devastating

—— Kirkus

If it's true escapism you're after, William Boyd can always be relied upon to transport the reader from reality and his next offering, The Romantic, another epic that follows Cashel Greville Ross from 19th-century Country Cork to Zanzibar via Oxford and Sri Lanka, offers a wonderful literary getaway as the nights draw in

—— Vogue, A Most Promising Page-Turner of the Season

Packed with passion, adventure, suspense, comic interludes and a range of colourful characters . . . the rollicking work of a masterful storyteller, The Romantic is both a vivid portrait of a life and a sweeping panorama of an age

—— Economist

The Romantic is certainly a crowd-pleaser . . . Boyd knows how to time the hights and lows, how to blend triumphs and tragedies, personal and historical . . . genuinely poignant and wise

—— Sunday Times

A satisfyingly meaty novel in the rich vein of his earlier classics The New Confessions and Any Human Heart. As we have come to expect, here is exceptional storytelling - pristine, immersive, and intoxicating. The elegant prose is characteristically detailed and precise . . . It has the expansiveness of many classic 19th century novels. There's a Dickensian warmth and verve, an epic scale, a spirited sense of chance and adventure. Boyd as ever stresses period detail, and the novel is as informative as it is entertaining . . . It is bravura, high octane stuff, eventful and sometimes on the edge of chaos

—— Irish Examiner

A panoramic and deeply satisfying narrative from an author on top form

—— Mail on Sunday

It's tremendously entertaining and, as always with Boyd, virtually impossible to stop reading

—— Daily Mirror

A globe-trotting adventure through the 19th century

—— i, Best Books for Autumn

Boyd's pile-up of set piece escapades offers a huge amount of fun

—— Daily Mail

Boyd's books are so enjoyable that it's hard for us to resent the tricks being played on us, even as we find ourselves constantly reaching for Google, wanting to know what is and isn't real

—— TLS

There's a cornucopia of fine things here . . . The Romantic, always enjoyable, ranks with two of his best: The New Confessions and Any Human Heart. Both were intelligent and engrossing, novels you lived with. Both told a fine story very well. The Romantic does just that

—— Scotsman

A ripping yarn. And as such, it is pretty much faultless: as moreish as good chocolate, terrifically entertaining, and deeply humane

—— i

A huge amount of fun

—— Daily Mail (Ireland)

One of our best contemporary storytellers

—— Spectator

A narrative that Charles Dickens or Jane Austen would surely have been happy to claim as their own . . . there's a joy to Boyd's storytelling throughout and his hero is one to cheer for

—— Business Post (Ireland)

A wonderful tale that spans a life of adventure, this is storytelling at its very best

—— Best

Crammed with incident, the novel has the wonderfully freewheeling quality that one associates with the great 19th-century novelists. As with most of Boyd's works, it manages to be warm-hearted and deliciously sardonic at the same time

—— Literary Review

William Boyd taps into the classic novel tradition with this sweeping tale of one man's century-spanning life

—— Spectator

There is no doubt that Boyd is a masterful storyteller . . . this is a book to get totally, utterly and delightfully lost in

—— Anna Bonet

A new novel by William Boyd is always a treat and in his picaresque latest, The Romantic, his hero is Cashel Greville Ross, born in 1799, a soldier, lover, friend of poets, bankrupt and adventurer who is swept into many of the most important episodes of the 19th century

—— Lucy Lethbridge , Oldie

This highly entertaining, engrossing page-turner is the fictionalised biography of Cashel Greville Ross, who was born in 1799 in Scotland and brought up in Cork. Such is William Boyd's mastery as a storyteller, one begins to believe that all of the events are entirely real

—— James Lawless , Sunday Independent

The Romantic is a rollicking read that will delight his many fans

—— Susie Mesure , i

A wild ride across the 19th century on the back of a narrative that never pauses for breath . . . this breakneck pace seems to be a function of Boyd's exceptional imaginative facility, which sees him just as irresistibly drawn to new ideas as his hero is

—— John Self , Financial Times

What could be more reassuring in troubling times than a new William Boyd novel? Trio is immensely readable, its descriptions full of light and colour, its humour spot on, its mood a perfect mix of frolicsome and melancholy

—— Sunday Telegraph on Trio

Reading William Boyd's Trio is like shrugging on a worn leather jacket on the first brisk morning of autumn: cosy but cool . . . He has enormous fun with the worlds - and egos - of page and screen

—— The Times on Trio

Breakneck pace seems to be a function of Boyd's exceptional imaginative facility, which sees him just as irresistibly drawn to new ideas as his hero is . . . there's something irresistible about that energy . . . if a whole-life novel is intended to represent the span of a unique existence, then The Romantic gets it right

—— FT

The Romantic is a whole-life novel, a form in which Boyd excels . . . a terrific read

—— Country & Town House
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