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Family Feeling
Family Feeling
Aug 28, 2025 2:16 PM

Author:Judith Saxton

Family Feeling

Dot Tegydd is the third daughter of propertied parents who longed for a son. Hywel Fletcher was born the day his father was killed in the pit, and is bitterly resented by his mother. And Huw Pettigrew is the much-loved and hard-working eldest child in a respected working family. Dot and Hywel dream of a contented future caring for their land, while Huw's dreams are more like nightmare . . . Yet when tragedy strikes it is Huw's vision which brings the three together and gives each of them, in the end, their heart's desire.

Reviews

Brims with wry perceptiveness and rueful humour

—— Peter Kemp , Sunday Times (Books of the Year)

The most touching novel [I read this year]

—— Craig Brown , Mail on Sunday (Books of the Year)

Bitter sweet... Either a ghost story or a sideways portrait of a marriage

—— James Kidd , Independent (Books of the Year)

The work of an artist at the peak of her powers... a brilliantly observed and mercifully unsentimental examination of the emotional arc of grief

—— Sarah Vine , The Times

Tyler strips away layers of everyday life to reveal the abyss of pain underneath but does so with such skill and sparkling wit it makes this a real celebration of life

—— Vanessa Berridge , Daily Express

This is what Tyler does better than almost any contemporary writer. She peers at the forgotten areas of the everyday, the bits that are hard to pinpoint, yet make up the bulk of our relationships. And this, ultimately, is why she is such a satisfying writer: she looks at people - at life - from the inside out

—— Lucy Atkins , Sunday Times

A simple, subtle and really honest account of how one man, Aaron, deals with the darkly comic death of his dumpy, clever and brilliant wife Dorothy... I finished it in one sitting

—— Alix Walker , Stylist

A perfectly judged and brilliantly executed novel of loss and recovery

—— Woman & Home

A near flawless novel of love and loss...this exquisitely poignant but unsentimental portrait of a loving but tragic mismatch

—— Rosemary Goring , Sunday Herald (Glasgow)

Yet again she has articulated the supreme difficulties of human communication in a calmly insightful exploration of love and truth, grief and reality

—— Eileen Battersby , Irish Times

Her stories are quite unlike anyone else's

—— Cressida Connolly , Daily Telegraph

Tyler writes with a generosity of spirit and an emotional truthfulness that makes you forget the bare mechanics of plot

—— David Robinson , Week

Tyler uses simple, elegant prose to manifest her particular brands of realism and humour

—— Freya McClelland , Independent

Tyler distilled

—— Lady

Her novels assert, with acuity, compassion and inventive humour, the uniqueness and value of each human life... a carefully observed study of grief and its trajectory

—— Pamela Norris , Literary Review

Deeply rewarding novel about grief and hope, infused with gentle humour

—— Sunday Times

Acutely, tenderly observed. Tyler is excellent on the ways we endlessly misread even those closest to us

—— Stephanie Cross , Daily Mail

Richer and more alive than the best work almost any other writer is producing

—— Cressida Connolly , Daily Telegraph

Deeply rewarding

—— Lucy Atkins , Sunday Times

All Hail Anne Tyler

—— Sunday Times

She's a master storyteller and inventor of character

—— Vanessa Berridge , Daily Express

A funny, gently moving and insightful book

—— Liam Heylin , Irish Examiner

What could be mawkish and cloying is gentle and touching, not least because she is a very funny writer

—— Michael Prodger , Financial Times

In Tyler’s small slices of life there is poetry and wisdom

—— Elaine Showalter , Guardian

The ending teeters on the brink of sentimentality but such is her psychological insight, the truth of her writing, that if she says unlikely happy endings are possible, I believe her

—— Jake Kerridge , Sunday Express

This meticulous, gently humorous novel is concerned with the effects of grief, the stop-start nature of moving on and the role of friendships, however imperfect, in facing catastrophe. [Tyler] remains as gimlet-eyed as ever in portraying ordinary lives that have become unmoored

—— Metro

This novel's great achievement is to capture the tensions and subtleties of a married life cut short… I read [it] virtually in one sitting, but that's a fairly common experience with Anne Tyler books… I didn't want it to end. Which is also a fairly common Tyler thing

—— Viv Groskop , Independent on Sunday

The Beginner’s Goodbye is a very funny book…every incident is at once recognizably true to life and yet somehow utterly off-kilter

—— Edmund Gordon , Times Literary Supplement

Engaging, heartfelt and brutal.

—— welovethisbook.com

Quite simply a masterpiece…at least as assured and vibrant in its characterization as Trainspotting, Skagboys is even more on the money politically… this novel more than any other , (including its brilliant predecessor) stands as our spiritual and moral history.

—— The Scotsman

There is enough of what Welsh does well — needle-sharp dialogue, vivid characters and a certainty of place — to make Skagboys his best work in many years…an essential read.

—— Timothy Mo , Irish Examiner

Welsh always spins his yarns with grisly élan.

—— Extra Time

I ended up charmed beyond measure, if that is the right word for a novel whose odd moments of poignance are regularly booted into touch by death, disillusionment and dereliction.

—— D J Taylor , Spectator

Every bit as impressive as Trainspotting

—— Daily Telegraph

Visceral, tragic and comic, with Welsh’s schlock-shock appeal

—— Arifa Akbar , i

If you enjoyed Trainspotting, you will adore this prequel... I think that Welsh has achieved the impossible and produced a prequel that betters the main text

—— Nudge

Filthy, furious and very funny, this is Welsh back on blistering top form

—— Mail on Sunday

The strength of Cline's first novel, other than its geeky referencing of 1980s pop culture, is the characterisation of the Candide-like Wade and his redemptive quest in both VR and the real world.

—— Guardian

If you grew up with an Atari or maybe had a Commodore 64 back in the day, you are going to really enjoy this one. Cline really captures the feeling of those good old days in Ready Player One.

—— WIRED.COM

Cline [crafts] a fresh and imaginative world from our old toy box ... Cline strikes the nerves of nerd culture as expertly as Andy played that skeleton organ in The Goonies.

—— Entertainment Weekly
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