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Duty Free
Duty Free
Nov 14, 2025 9:59 AM

Author:Moni Mohsin

Duty Free

As every woman knows, matchmaking is no easy job. Particularly when you're trying to find a girl for your dull, balding, freshly-divorced cousin and on top of that manage a house full of servants, shop for contraband Prada goods and attend parties every night. Not to mention the fact that your husband disapproves of everything you do, your city is under attack, and your friends can't be trusted - how is a girl to cope?

Originally published with the title Tender Hooks

Reviews

Savagely funny

—— Sunday Times

Jane Austen's Emma reworked by a Pakistani Helen Fielding...wickedly diverting

—— Daily Mail

A mix of Bridget Jones and Carrie Bradshaw, post-singledom... universally sharp and funny

—— Independent

A sly piece of social satire

—— Financial Times

Hilarious

—— Metro

Mohsin's first-person comic novel of a Pakistani socialite both enlightens and delights

—— i

A romp through Pakistan's high society

—— Sunday Sun

Moni Mohsin is one of the funniest and sharpist satirists writing anywhere in the world today - she can make you laugh out loud even while she delivers hard-hitting critiques of Lahore high society and the state of Pakistani politics

—— Kamila Shamsie

This is a wildly entertaining book but, beware, it also bites

—— Neel Mukherjee

Achingly funny, touching and fizzing with intelligence, this book will have you laughing out loud even as you fear for the state of world politics

—— Tash Aw

A delicious bon-bon of a book, skewering Pakistani society.Great good fun

—— . - Daniyal Mueenuddin, author of In Other Rooms, Other Wonders, shortlisted for the National Book Award

Interweaves a variety of thoroughly imagined life stories and predicaments with quiet, effective skill

—— Mail on Sunday

I have greater admiration for Margaret Forster than for most novelists. A very fine, continuously interesting, and often moving work, all the better because it is so firmly rooted in the ordinary world of everyday experience

—— Scotsman

At times witty and enchanting, on other occasions full of doubt and self-loathing, Merivel remains a stunning achievement. He is Everyman and speaks to us all

—— Virginia Blackburn , Sunday Express

Exuberance is a very hard thing to sustain in a novel… However, Tremain brings it off brilliantly. As one might expect, this is a very funny novel, full of picaresque adventure, hapless accidents and ingeniously wrought slapstick. However, it is also a very moving and beautiful novel. There are passages here which I found myself reading over and over again simply in order to savour them. Merivel: A Man of His Time may have been a long time coming, but it’s been well worth the wait

—— John Preston , Mail on Sunday

Merivel is excellent company. Writing with a mimic’s ear for conversation, whimsical one moment, grave the next, Tremain has an underlying preoccupation here: the last third of live, love and loss, loneliness and vanity

—— Maggie Fergusson , Intelligent Life

Tremain writes beautifully about Reniassance England but it’s the glittering paradoxes of Merivel’s character that here leap fully formed from the page

—— Claire Allfree , Metro

Tremain’s novel experiments continually with light and shade – she expertly paints a picture with three dimensions and real feeling

—— Lesley McDowall , Scotsman

Merivel offers a rich and satisfying sequel to the bright beginning of Restoration

—— Lindsay Duguid , Sunday Times

More interesting than all the period decoration is the character of Merivel, a character whom the author has such deep knowledge of. Tremain’s fusion of an engrossing character and the minutiae of another time is a marvel

—— Lucy Daniel , Daily Telegraph

Tremain's control of her character and her reflective but often dramatic unfolding of events are impressive acts of authorial ventriloquism, in which she gives a nod to the great diarists of that era but carries off her own man's story with wit, grace and originality. There is only to add that, despite the linear storytelling imposed on a journal, she not only effortlessly sustains momentum and mood, but brings the novel to as near a perfect ending as one could wish

—— Rosemary Goring , Herald

Tremain is particularly good at exploring the nuances of life for the hapless Merivel so that reader empathises with his sense of loneliness and despair. As well as exploring the sensitive side of Merivel’s character we share his intimate thoughts which are often very funny. A beautiful book

—— We Love This Book

A delightful portrait of an aging man at the mercy of his own foibles and frustrations

—— Marie Claire

Sequels rarely live up to their predecessors but this one comes close

—— Lianne Kolirin , Daily Express

A glorious book of heart-warming philosophy and heart-rending sadness

—— Sainsbury’s Magazine

An excellent novel...thrilling reading...incredibly entertaining

—— Bookgeeks.co.uk

Surely one of the most versatile novelists writing today

—— Daily Express

Vivid, original and always engaging

—— The Times

Rose Tremain writes comedy that can break your heart

—— Literary Review

Steps inside the mind of Sir Robert Merivel

—— Sunday Business Post

For a second time this is one to cherish

—— Boyd Tonkin , Independent

A Pepysian romp of the first order

—— Independent Radar

Continues in the same superior vein as Restoration… The fusion of such an engrossing character, and the minutiae of another time, remains a marvel

—— Daily Telegraph

In this evocative and beautifully drawn novel of family and loyalty in the face of an uncertain future Tremain continues the story of a wonderfully unique character

—— Hannah Britt , Daily Express

Hugely enjoyable

—— Reader's Digest

Merivel’s hapless charm remains intact in this tour de force of literary technique

—— Sunday Telegraph (Seven)

A sequel that looks back to the earlier novel without ever quite recapturing its spirit is the perfect form in which to evoke that feeling of having to carry on, and of trying to make yourself have fun even with it eventually begins to hurt

—— Colin Burrow , Guardian

A marvelllously rollicking good read, and it is such a pleasure to meet Robert Merivel again. Rose Tremain brings the character to life in a way that makes you want to find out even more about the period. Enormously skilled and deft

—— Good Book Guide
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