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Great Expectations
Great Expectations
Dec 28, 2025 8:31 PM

Author:Kathy Acker

Great Expectations

'New York City is very peaceful and quiet, and the pale grey mists are slowly rising, to show me the world'

Pip switches identities, sexes and centuries in this punk, fairytale reimagining of Charles Dickens's original Great Expectations. Both familiar and unfamiliar, our orphaned narrator is transplanted to New York City in the 1980s; becoming, by turns, a sailor, a pirate, a rebel and an outlaw, through adventures incorporating desire, creativity, porn, sadism and art. This ribald explosion of literature, sex and violence shows the literary anarchist Kathy Acker at her most brilliant and brave.

'Acker's most accomplished experimental work' The Village Voice

'A postmodern Colette with echoes of Cleland's Fanny Hill' William S. Burroughs

Reviews

Acker's most accomplished experimental work... As she says in Great Expectations, 'A narrative is an emotional moving.' It should be, but she's one of the few people writing today who manage to blend that kind of warmth, gutsiness, and skill.

—— Sally O’Driscoll , The Village Voice

Acker's most ambitious, most exciting and masterful novel to date... The novel is as revolutionary in form as it is in content.

—— Steve Abbot , Poetry Flash

[In playtime] McMillan makes it clear that the poetics of physical wasn’t a one-off. As with all the best second outings, this collection firmly establishes his patent… [a] fully realised, deeply humane collection.

—— Sarah Crown , Guardian

McMillan scrutinises the violent idealism of masculinity in monologues that are both tender and steely told with courage, invention and charm.

—— Jeremy Noel-Tod , Sunday Times, **Books of the Year**

Andrew McMillan's award-winning debut collection, physical, a raw and tender exploration of gay love and desire, heralded him as a new force in contemporary poetry. This, his second book, only cements that reputation... these poems are insightful, revealing, honest and brutally tender.

—— attitude

playtime is admirably devoted to intimacies and it has a tenderness to it even in its most private of moments... This is a triumphant collection of poems.

—— Elaine Cosgrove , Totally Dublin

By returning to familiar ground and deepening his engagement with it, McMillan makes clear that the poetics of physical wasn’t a one-off. As with all the best second outings, this collection firmly establishes his patent… [a] fully realised, deeply humane collection.

—— Sarah Crown , Guardian

Vivid, accessible and honest, sometimes uncomfortably so.

—— Alan Bennett , London Review of Books

An unobstructed exploration of an important subject. McMillan is writing not only see-through but see-beyond poetry.

—— Kate Kellaway , Observer

The loneliness and confusion of childhood are wonderfully rendered...reminiscent of Tyler's best work, such as Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant

—— Molly McCloskey , Guardian

Classic Tyler; she captures the defining moments of love and loss in one middle-aged woman's life and combines it with the ultimate upbeat ending, proving it's never too late to live the life you want

—— YOU Magazine

Tyler remains my most trusted literary companion… Freedom, flight, oxygen, breath, space: these themes whistle through Clock Dance's pages

—— Rebecca Swirsky , New Statesman

Full of small delights... She has a keen eye and an alert ear, sympathy for her characters, an awareness of both life's comedy and its tragedy

—— Alan Massie , Scotsman

In Anne Tyler’s skilled hands the everyday becomes significant… With beautifully observed characters and infused with quiet humour, this is another triumph

—— Fanny Blake , Woman & Home

Tyler's tenderness with her protagonists shouldn't be undervalued; this, along with her attention to detail when it comes to the minutiae of quotidian life, is what makes one keep reading

—— Independent

Funny and interesting… Tyler’s novel presents a moving portrait of a woman, late in life, discovering an environment in which she can flourish

—— Pamela Norris , Literary Review

The book we'll all be reading this summer

—— Louise France , The Times

A stellar addition to Tyler's prodigious catalogue

—— Publishers Weekly

The most dependably rewarding novelist now at work in our country... Ms. Tyler’s career reveals a surpassing steadiness – of ambition, theme, output

—— Wall Street Journal

I adore her and find her books immensely comforting. I loved her latest [Clock Dance]. It's such a bold book... a novel that encourages you to play the shrink

—— Patrick Gale , Observer

Tyler has a keen eye and an alert ear, sympathy for her characters, an awareness of both life’s comedy and its tragedy

—— Allan Massie , i

One of this country's great artists...a powerful, stirring work. Tyler has lost none of the inspired grace of
her prose, nor her sad, frank humor, nor her limitless sympathy for women who ask for little and get
less

—— USA Today

Her stirring story celebrates the joys of self-discovery and the essential truth that family is ours to define

—— People

Tyler's bedazzling yet fathoms-deep feel-good novel is wrought with nimble humour, intricate understanding of emotions and family, place and community – and bounteous pleasure in quirkiness, discovery, and renewal

—— Booklist

I never look at a family, or a couple in a car, or a funeral cortege without thinking: "I wonder what's going on there." That's what Anne Tyler teaches you: never judge a cover until you've read its book

—— Ann Treneman , The Times

Tyler captures the quiet turmoil of family life with the utmost discretion, knowing that to understand it is not the same as being able to subordinate it

—— Alex Clark , Times Literary Supplement

Rigorously intelligent, quietly funny and very precise about words

—— Mark Lawson , Radio Times

A beautifully observed portrait of one woman’s quiet quest for identity and purpose

—— Hannah Beckerman , Sunday Express

Clock Dance is moving, funny acute… This is a beautifully structured work of fiction, full of narrative tension, which moves towards a fine diminuendo, followed by a crisis of possibility

—— Linsay Duguid , The Tablet

A lovely novel following the author’s usual theme of hope and regret, renewal and contentment

—— Hello!

Tyler has the ability to bring character to life in just a few sentences

—— Claire Allfree , Metro

Characters pulse with lifelikeness. The tone flickers between humorous relish and sardonic shrewdness. Dialogue crackles with authenticity… Clock Dance is a warmly appealing tale of timely recuperation

—— Peter Kemp , Sunday Times

Anne Tyler’s astute new novel Clock Dance is fuelled by kindness, kindness that begins tentatively with false starts and blind spots and grows into the extravagant all-encompassing sort

—— Susan Boyt , Financial Times

I loved Clock Dance

—— Cressida Connolly , Spectator

Expect nuance and laser-eyed perception here, from the Pulitzer Prize-winning author

—— Evening Standard

Warmly appealing and sharply observant...combines comic relish with psychological and social shrewdness. Characters pulse with lifelikeness. Dialogue crackles with authenticity. Changes brought about by time are fascinatedly and fascinatingly observed

—— Sunday Times

A moving, often spiky study of relationships and the far-reaching effects of trauma

—— Daily Telegraph

A thought-provoking story that resonates with emotional depth

—— Neil Armstrong and Hephzibah Anderson , Mail on Sunday, *Summer reads of 2019*

An immersive look into friendship, parenthood, sex, and grief - as well as the fragility of love. It is told with such detail, you're left wanting more

—— Independent

Beautifully written and observed

—— Tom Chivers , Geographical

Evans is extraordinarily good on the minutiae of grief, family, and the fragility of love

—— i

a lyrical portrait of modern London

—— Sunday Times

Placing culturally marginalised voices centre stage to explode open a world many of us know little about... [The Mars Room] left me in tears.

—— Claire Allfree , Daily Mail

Crushing... A powerful, tragic novel.

—— Alastair Mabbott , Herald Scotland

[A] visceral portrait of prison life

—— James Cann , UK Press Syndication

The charm and wit of the incarcerated people in The Mars Room shines in Kushner's prose

—— Irish Independent

A mysterious portrait of contemporary America and life on its margins... for fans of "Orange Is The New Black".

—— Marta Bausells , Elle

A very compelling read… hilarious and depressing and rage-inducing in equal measures.

—— Valerie O’Riordan , Bookmunch

Absorbing.

—— The Week - Novel Of The Week

Lyrical, bleakly comic and, ultimately, intensely affecting

—— Stephanie Cross , The Lady

It is a necessary and compelling book, and this year’s must read

—— Anne Enright , Guardian

Rachel Kushner’s exhaustive research into what goes on within these walls

—— Strong Words

Kushner’s high-definition, high-impact prose is as electrifying as it is daring

—— Anthony Cummins , Daily Mail

The momentum of the novel resides in its prose, the spring and sass of a voice so vivid it can largely dispense with the mechanics of plot

—— Nat Segnit , Times Literary Supplement

A salty and hilarious novel from one of America's best living novelists.

—— Daily Telegraph

Rachel Kushner's The Mars Room should be a favourite [to win the Man Booker Prize]. If you like your escapism as gritty as it gets, prepare to be hooked by this unflinching account of a female prisoner serving a double life sentence... The Mars Room is rarely easy reading, but the furore of voices and violence and injustice throws you right into the story and keeps you immersed there.

—— Culture Whisper

Kushner’s novel is a timely reminder that a country’s authoritarian tendencies can be most easily measured by the number of people it deems unworthy of freedom

—— Emily Witt , London Review of Books

Rachel Kushner knows how to sniff out a good character.

—— Sunday Times

Rachel Kushner’s The Mars Room immerses you in the life of a high-security women’s prison in California, its central character Romy – accused of killing her stalker – both gritty and fragile. This was not a subject I thought would grip me, but in Kushner’s firm hands I was entranced. Much of the book is autobiographical – while never in prison herself, Kushner was the daughter of Beatniks and allowed to roam the dodgier areas of San Francisco as a teenager. The characters range from bullet-headed killers to a well-meaning male teacher whose ambiguities are brilliantly done. Romy’s trans friend Conan, “shoulders as broad as the aisle, and a jawline beard”, is delightfully free of the politically correct, while the style veers excitingly from straight narrative to scribbled lists like whimpers of despair.

—— Adam Thorpe , Times Literary Supplement **Books of the Year 2018**

Rachel Kushner's The Mars Room was a hot favourite on this year's Booker shortlist, and it's easy to see why… Kushner's atmospheric writing is compelling to the last.

—— Irish Independent, *The best reads of 2018: Our critics name their top picks*

Kushner’s writing is the most marvellous I read this year… time and again I found myself rereading paragraphs of The Mars Room for her perfectly turned sentences, the music of her prose

—— Neil D. A. Stewart , Civilian, **Books of the Year**

[A] brilliantly compelling read

—— Sunday Times
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