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Everything Will Be All Right
Everything Will Be All Right
Nov 30, 2025 5:50 PM

Author:Tessa Hadley

Everything Will Be All Right

'An astute and accomplished work' Daily Mail

Joyce Stevenson is thirteen when her widowed mother takes them to live with Aunt Vera, a formidable teacher neglected by her unfaithful husband. Joyce watches the two sisters - her aunt's unbending dedication to the life of the mind, her mother worn down by housework - and thinks that each of them is powerless in her own way.

For Joyce, art school provides an escape route, and there she falls in love with one of her teachers. When she marries and has children, she is determined to manage her relationship with a new freedom, but will she be able to save herself from the mistakes of the previous generation? Or will her daughter, Zoe, only see Joyce as similarly trapped?

A poignant tale of navigating mothering and womanhood in twentieth century Britain, Everything Will Be All Right is yet another work of the finest beauty from Tessa Hadley.

Reviews

Few writers give me such consistent pleasure

—— Zadie Smith

She has such great psychological insights into human beings, which is rare. She is one of the best fiction writers writing today

—— Chimamanda Ngozie Adichie

Bewitchingly compelling... Gloriously addictive, delectably enjoyable... the reader is snared and kept captive to the last... Exquisite

—— Guardian

Hadley's fiction resembles that of Anne Tyler in aiming to illuminate ordinary life

—— Sunday Times

Genuinely exciting

—— New Statesman

Seductively written

—— Sunday Telegraph

Engrossing... This book is marvellous - a paean to the quiet splendour of life

—— Time Out

Witty and warm... An astute and accomplished work

—— Daily Mail

Fine-tuned, lyrical, exact

—— Independent

This fine, thoughtful novel underlines Tessa Hadley's skill at tackling and reclaiming the saga

—— Times Literary Supplement

Mankell confronts his own mortality with moving intelligence and honesty, meditating on vast spans of time that cannot be fully apprehended by intellect or imagination, from the last ice age to the ones to come, and from the earliest civilisations to modern society.

—— Lettie Kennedy , Observer

Delivered in a no-nonsense style, never striving for melodrama or controversy…making us think deeply about what it means to live, and to die, as a result.

—— The Big Issue

In calm, limpid writing [Mankell] contemplates his illness – cancer – but is determined to hold on to the good things in life.

—— Psychologies

The effect is more like poetry than prose, as we are transported from cave paintings to motorways, seedy hotels to dazzling cathedrals, hospital wards to the Louvre, the Prado, the Thassos ampitheatre.

—— Sheena Joughin , Times Literary Supplement

Although written in the final year of his life, after his diagnosis with cancer, the result is uplifting and, as a memoir, as unusual a creation as his Nordic detective, Kurt Wallander.

—— Olivia Cole , GQ Magazine

The character of Dalila, so courageous and dignified, so unassuming and yet so resilient, lives with the reader long after the book has been put down.

—— John Harding

An astonishingly accomplished debut about war, survival and humanity . . . this is very much in the territory of The Book Thief and The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas with all the potential that such a comparison suggests

—— Fiona Noble, The Bookseller - One to Watch

[a] complex graceful book

—— Financial Times

Exquisite

—— Irish Independent

Exquisite debut novel

—— Wall Street Journal

Like the characters in his debut novel, author Gavriel Savit has harnessed the power of language. He's a talented wordsmith, wielding words and sentences with a precision that allows them to wriggle deep into this reader's heart, leaving me both enchanted and brokenhearted

—— Sara Grochowski, Publishers Weekly

One of those all ages and no age stories . . . told by a genuine wordsmith . . . And it's a story of generosity in the worst of times. Of friendship and loyalty and yes, of love despite all the horror. We won't forget how it felt to read it. Ever

—— Jill Murphy, The Bookbag

A beautiful and stunning read . . . It creeps slowly into your heart just like Morris Gleitzman'sOnce, and The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas did

—— Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books

Such an important, painful, beautiful, hopeful read

—— Bloggers Heart Books

A harsh tale of innocence lost, yet touched with magic

—— Herald

This is cleverly done and beautifully written tale of loss, hope, survival and trust

—— Kate Ormand

Savit spins a dark and heart-breaking tale of history and fable seen through the eyes of a child. A thought-provoking read, great for book clubs

—— South Wales Evening Post, Children's Book of the Week

A complex, gruelling trip through the midnight of the last century

—— Financial Times - Summer Reading 2016

Written with a clipped, capering style and comic flair that can't fail to charm.

—— Compass magazine

A profound, often funny survey of mid-20th-Century Russia

—— Daily Telegraph

Unputdownable

—— Irish Independent

Among the greatest comic novels of all time . . . told with such style and wit that every page reduced me to helpless laughter and admiration

—— The Daily Express, BOOK OF THE YEAR

The book I would recommend to anyone who appreciates what only fiction can do … It’s a page-turner and a delight.

—— David Hepworth , Radio Times

I love the novels of Amor Towles, especially A Gentleman in Moscow - he has this ability to nail the idiosyncrasies and quirks of a character in just a few words.

—— Antonio Pappano , Daily Telegraph

A heart-warming story that asks the reader to consider what is important in life. We loved it. *****

—— Woman’s Weekly

I can highly recommend A Gentleman in Moscow by Amor Towles as lockdown reading ... The story resonates because we have all endured restricted lifestyles of late and may continue to for months to come.

—— Philip Rodney , The Times (Scotland)

It is a good book to read during this pandemic because it's about how he is being confined to Moscow's Hotel Metropol.

—— Dougray Scott , Metro

Towles's book is a delight, with a beguiling central character and lively descriptions of life in Russia over a period of 30 years.

—— Independent

A wonderful bookwhich gives the reader an understanding of life in post revolution Moscow.

—— Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall

Totally original novel ... A great deal of Russian history is also subtly woven into this magical book, which is tear-jerking but never sentimental, with a quite unexpected and thrilling ending.

—— Daily Mail

Wonderful, combining brilliant storytelling with beautiful writing.

—— Jeffrey Archer, Daily Express

I love the novels of Amor Towles, especially A Gentleman in Moscow - he has this ability to nail the idiosyncrasies and quirks of a character in just a few words.

—— Antonio Pappano, Daily Telegraph

It's hard not to fall in love with Count Rostov, an impeccably mannered and mischievous aesthete placed under permanent house arrest at Moscow's Metropol hotel ... An endearing and frequently hilarious novel that covers big topics with a velvet touch.

—— Independent

The fear, danger and paranoia felt in those times rise memorably from the pages.

—— Choice Magazine

Barnes stands out, so vivid are his images and so poignant his insights. His works stand among the classics of the postmodern era, and for good reason.

—— Ben Craik , Upcoming

A marvellous meditation on the Cold War era and particularly the battles of conscience that besiege a man living under tyranny.

—— Richard Fitzpatrick , Irish Examiner

The tone is intimate and aphoristic, the paragraphs succinct.

—— David Gutman , Gramophone

A fascinating account of the life of Dimitri Shostakovich… Perceptive, symbolic… The Noise of Time is an essential read, and not only for musicians.

—— Classical Music

A finely-tuned masterpiece... Barnes' prose is supreme.

—— Western Morning News

An intimate portrait of a public intellectual living in a totalitarian atmosphere… Immersive… The Noise of Time presents a compelling story in engaging and original prose.

—— Conor O'Donovan , Headstuff

Kaleidoscopic portrait… Barnes deftly constructs a life history... A masterfully told story of survival. *****

—— Nick Shave , BBC Music Magazine

Beautifully composed.

—— Jenny Comita , W Magazine

Without a doubt, Barnes has succeeded the high expectations of the people who waited with bated breath for the release of The Noise of Time. In a work that feels both original and authentic, he encourages us to consider the importance of art, in whatever form, and the influence it can have on us all.

—— Beth Blakemore , Student Newspaper

Barnes at his best...a poignant fictional recreation of the artistic agonies of the composer Shostakovich.

—— Sunday Times

A very sensitive account of how art can be in conflict with naked political power.

—— Observer

A book I’d like to tuck myself away for a day to read. It’s short in length but by all accounts big on ideas and power.

—— Susie Dent , Radio Times Christmas Gift Guide

His Dmitri Shostakovich is completely believable.

—— Margaret MacMillan , New Statesman, Book of the Year

[A] brilliant study of the relationship between art and an oppressive regime… A compelling depiction of the country’s history and a richly imagined close-up of the artist.

—— Lady, Book of the Year

A poignant and thoughtful portrait of the persecuted artist.

—— Brad Davies , i, Book of the Year

[It is] elegant.

—— Duncan White , Daily Telegraph, Book of the Year

Another Brilliant reinvention by Barnes.

—— Daily Telegraph, Book of the Year #26

My favourite book of this year is The Noise of Time.

—— Margaret MacMillan , New Statesman, Book of the Year

His best for ages. It is gripping, outward-looking, generous with plot and atmosphere and far beyond the powers of McEwan, Amis, Ishiguro, Rushidie et al…. This book grabbed me by the nuts like nothing of his since Starting at the Sun.

—— Giles Coren , The Times, Book of the Year

[A] haunting novel on the agonies of Shostakovitch under Stalin and his successors… I recommended it to a friend who for years was one of the great reviewers at the Washington Post. His reply: “It’s an extraordinary book. It’s a book that makes me wish I were reviewing again.”

—— Alex Russell , Financial Times, Book of the Year

A mini-masterpiece.

—— Rebecca Rose , Financial Times, Book of the Year

An elegant portrait of Shostakovitch.

—— Ali Smith , Guardian, Book of the Year

Written with Barnes’ characteristic low-key elegance, the book becomes a meditation on artistic integrity and its limits in a brutal regime

—— Irish Independent, Book of the Year

An impressive narrative of personal integrity.

—— G. Van Der Zwaan , Times Higher Education, Book of the Year

As a portrait of the composer and his time this book is a complete success… The Noise of Time is also convincing in the details… A book in which a certain grim humour is never too far away.

—— Nicholas Lezard , Guardian

[A] gem of a novel.

—— Mail on Sunday

A compelling read that combines sharp insights, lyrical passages and dramatic tension.

—— Lady

Black humour and retrospective anguish prevail in Julian Barnes’s latest novel.

—— Lara Enoch , Guardian

A beautifully told story, this is subtle and powerful.

—— William Leith , Evening Standard

This small novel is an elegant and unflinching account of a life lived under extreme pressure, during Stalin’s Great Terror. Julian Barnes fleshes out the life of the composer Shostakovich whose life is under threat. A powerful story, well-crafted and beautifully written about the humanity and torments of a creative soul… An informative, thought provoking read.

—— Western Morning News

An immense emotional and intellectual punch.

—— Sunday Times
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