Author:Frances Burney

With entries from the diary of Fanny Burney.
'O Sir, how much uneasiness must I suffer, to counterbalance one short morning of happiness!'
In this comic and sharply incisive satire of excess and affectations, beautiful young Evelina falls victim to the rakish advances of Sir Clement Willoughby on her entrance to the world of fashionable London. Colliding with the manners and customs of a society she doesn't understand, she finds herself without hope that she should ever deserve the attention of the man she loves. Frances Burney's first novel brilliantly sends up eighteenth-century society - and its opinions of women - while enticingly depicting its delights.
The Penguin English Library - 100 editions of the best fiction in English, from the eighteenth century and the very first novels to the beginning of the First World War.
You don't analyse such sunlit perfection, you just bask in its warmth and splendour.
—— Stephen FryStaggering diversity and detail ... An astonishing achievement.
—— Sunday TelegraphA great, heaving countryside of a book...consistently funny...fluent and elusive, while retaining just the right hint of poison
—— TelegraphStephenson mixes a library’s worth of ideas with compulsive derring-do … its scope and inventiveness become addictive.
—— Time OutA breathless ride…the writing gives an immersive sense of time and place
—— FaceA brilliant, bulging historical novel ... Thrillingly accomplished ... Magnificent ... one finishes it already eager to begin the sequel
—— GuardianHe remains one of the most interesting authors we have, not least for continually engaging with those areas in the life of a nation which journalists and politicians tip-toe around
—— Independent on SundayIt had me roaring with laughter
—— IndependentBeing an Amis novel it’s not without the odd good joke, and he is, of course, incapable of writing and inelegant line. It’s almost as if he alone can sense both the golden ratio of a sentence, and its perfect rhythm: it’s like he’s Michelangelo and Keith Moon
—— Sunday TelegraphFull of hilarious set-pieces, wisecracks and wordplay.
—— Daily ExpressTillyard is a fluent and attractive chronicler of detail and some of her imaginative liberties are ingenious
—— Jane Shilling , Sunday TelegraphThis saga of lives swept up in the Peninsular War recalls Georgette Heyer at her best...impossible to put down
—— Kate Saunders , SagaA thrilling romance brought to life with exquisite detail
—— PrimaA prodigious talent able to combine meticulous research with novelistic devices...there is much to enjoy and admire
—— Norma Clarke , Times Literary SupplementFluently written and impeccably researched
—— The LadyGripping
—— Easy LivingIt is time we stopped thinking of the historical novel as a genre, and an inferior one at that. If its ostensible subject matter means that it doesn't attempt to tell us how we live now, nevertheless a novel set back in time may, if it is good, say as much about what it is to be alive as one set in the next street or another country today. Tides of War is such a novel. It is diverting, but not a diversion
—— The SpectatorA well written, engaging read...beautifully observed
—— History TodayA vivid account of a couple of years in the Peninsula Campaign and a sympathetic portrait of those left behind
—— Joanna Hines , Literary ReviewA delicious novel by an experienced author who captures the scientific atmosphere of the early 19th century with a devastating study of infidelity
—— Colin Gardiner , Oxford TimesThe real life players of the Napoleonic era spring to life
—— iCompelling
—— Big IssueHighly assured and almost educational with its broad sweep of history
—— Jane Housham , GuardianTillyard’s achievement is in this original portray log the Regency era and its relevance to our own time
—— Philippa Williams , The Lady






