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How to Forget
How to Forget
Nov 23, 2025 4:28 PM

Author:Marius Brill

How to Forget

Do you hold on to your memories? Or do they hold on to you?

Magicov the Magnificent, grand illusionist, earns his living entertaining the geriatrics of Lotus House Care Home. But Mr Magicov (also known as Peter) envies them - they've mastered a trick that eludes him. They can forget.

Peter yearns to forget. But memories haunt him: the shameful moment an eight-year-old wrecked his life; the FBI agent who hunted him like a dog; that suitcase stuffed with a million pounds. More than anything Peter wants to forget Kate, the expert con woman. The one he loved and left.

For renowned bain-scientist Dr Chris Tavasligh, Peter's craving to escape makes him the perfect candidate for a bold experiment in changing minds - forever. Faced with such an opportunity, will Peter go through with it? And if he does, who will he become?

Reviews

Fantastic, hilarious... verbal pyrotechnics, supported by a fecund imagination of the first order

—— The Times

How to Forget is a genuinely funny romp through some of the darker areas of the human mind and some of the more life-threatening areas of mentalism and magic. An engaging and good-hearted read

—— A L Kennedy

A smorgasbord of romantic romp, pseudo-scholarship, urban melodrama and metafictional mystery

—— Time Out

Highly entertaining yet intelligent comic novel...Brill's sense of fun is evident on every page

—— Times Literary Supplement

An absurd, hilarious, spy-cum-action-cum-postmodern thriller, it is incredibly clever without showing off, self-referential without being self-congratulatory, and a damn good read. Fantastic

—— The List

Praise for Making Love, A Conspiracy of the Heart: An exceptional piece of writing... as winning a first novel as I have read in a long time

—— Sunday Telegraph

An epic of a novel...in some ways better than Birdsong, or at least more subtle and far ranging

—— Country Life

This is a bold and remarkable work of imagination, particularly in its daring remastery of the 19th-century novel form and the sustained grace of its prose. To write so well for so many hundreds of pages is an amazing feat of intellectual athleticism

—— Jane Shilling , Sunday Telegraph

Faulks has woven dozens of compelling voices together to produce an extraordinary novel of magnificent scope

—— Jonathan Ree , Evening Standard

[S]tructurally intricate, yet intensely focused on the lives of individuals...Human Traces is replete with interesting ideas and contains some exceptionally fine topographic writing

—— Jane Stevenson , Observer

One of the most impressive novelists of his generation

—— Sunday Telegraph

Enthralling and enchanting – I literally couldn’t put it down. A wondrous book!

—— Tamora Pierce , bestselling author of the Song of the Lionness Quartet

The Bear and the Nightingale is a marvelous trip into an ancient Russia where magic is a part of everyday life

—— Todd McCaffrey , author of The Dragon Books

beautifully wrought fairytale for adults...

—— Writing Magazine

Fairy tale lovers, if you’re going to read one fantasy book this winter, let this be it.... beautiful debut

—— www.bookish.com

An enchanting yet haunting Russian fairytale which inspires courage in a time of darkness

—— The Observer

Katherine Arden's Winternight Trilogy isn't just good - it's hug-to-your-chest, straight-to-the-favourites-shelf, reread-immediately good, and each book just gets better

—— Laini Taylor

A historical fantasy perfect for those who love ancient stories and tradition

—— Good Housekeeping

A powerful read

—— Stylist

A funny, emotional, brilliantly observed story

—— Bella Magazine

It's one of those rare books with almost universal appeal: it will make you laugh, cry and break your heart

—— The Bookseller

It wreaks emotional havoc . . . To finish it with a firm resolve to be a better person - well, you can't ask much more of any book than that

—— Independent

When the kids have finished with this, the adults will want to read it. Everybody should

—— Financial Times

A bold tale of slavery for a new 'Roots' generation

—— Washington Post

Rich, epic. . . Each chapter is tightly plotted, and there are suspenseful, even spectacular climaxes

—— New York Magazine

Rarely does a grand, sweeping epic plumb interior lives so thoroughly. Yaa Gyasi's Homegoing is a marvel

—— Shelf Awareness

Terrific

—— Ann Patchett

Spectacular

—— Taiye Selasi

Homegoing is stunning - a truly heartbreaking work of literary genius

—— Bustle

This is, hand on heart, a completely brilliant novel...a brilliant debut. If this isn't shortlisted for some prizes next year, I'll be disappointed

—— Stylist's pick of the best new books for 2017

Encompassing events major and minor, but skilfully skipping the civil war, it humanises big issues by giving us unforgettable characters. It could not be more relevant or needed

—— Damian Barr , Observer Books of the Year

Gyasi imbues indigenous life with richness and dignity, in a style that owes something - though by no means everything - to Chinua Achebe...it serves as the engine for a powerful message

—— Daily Telegraph

A future classic and a novel that you'll want to pass on to everyone you know...the real deal...2017 is set to be the year of Homegoing

—— Stylist

While the issues she wrestles with are heavy, her writing is a joy....Now, more than ever, we need books like this one

—— Red

Hugely courageous and really important

—— Sathnam Sanghera

Homegoing is remarkable...the writing at the end of the book is every bit as vital as that at the start...she has produced a contemporary classic - one you'll actually want to read

—— Daily Mail

An epic debut novel

—— Good Housekeeping

Intriguing debut...a noble enterprise

—— Mail on Sunday

Brilliant

—— Sunday Telegraph

Vivid and ambitious debut

—— Sunday Express

Toni Morrison's Beloved spoke to a generation. Yaa Gyasi's Homegoing will do the same for a new one. In a word, it's brilliant. And not just "for a debut"

—— The Pool

The powerful narrative of Yaa Gyasi's accomplished first novel do more than reveal the history that still troubles the United States. They make that history immediate

—— Harper's Bazaar

A fascinating view of the history of slavery...Gyasi gives voice to suppressed stories, and that feels hugely important....it certainly deserves our attention

—— Sunday Times

A searing indictment of racism and a very impressive debut

—— Sunday Express

Ambitious, superbly written, important - don't miss this one

—— Woman & Home

It is written with such maturity and beauty, that it is hard to believe it is Gyasi's first published work...Gyasi has created a masterpiece which is educational, highly ambitious and extremely touching. Her writing style is raw and intense and leaves one desperate to see what work she will produce in the future

—— Press Association

Extraordinary

—— Glamour

The hype is justified

—— Emerald Street

This unputdownable tale spans three continents and seven generations to tell the story of a family and of America itself

—— Reader's Digest

A bold and ambitious debut...full of fire and youthful confidence

—— Daily Express

Here is a book to help us remember. It is well worth its weight

—— Guardian

Hands down the best book I've read in months...I can't wait to see what Yaa Gyasi does next

—— Grazia

Gyasi has created a masterpiece which is educational, highly ambitious and extremely touching

—— The i

Through her words we come to understand parts of history that are sometimes ignored

—— Pride

An epic saga

—— Scotsman

A wonderfully evocative and compassionate novel - one that shows deftness, depth and maturity. Homegoing is a gift to its readers and a treasure to cherish

—— Petina Gappah , Financial Times

The structure is fantastically strong, but it would have been nothing without Gyasi's ability to bring each character alive. At every turn she resists cliché and dogma ... she deftly weaves in just enough historical information without sacrificing its complexity ... Homegoing has something better than perfection, and that is a touch of magic... [Gyasi is] the right artist at the right time

—— Alice O'Keefe , New Statesman

Gyasi's debut novel has a distinctive strength and courage ... a descendent of Alex Haley's Roots and Toni Morrison's Beloved, an extended response to Joyce Carol Oates's Last Hundred Years trilogy

—— Times Literary Supplement

A confident, vivid, engrossingtale [that] winds towards a moving conclusion

—— Radio Times

Gyasi's widescreen view of history powerfully drives home her view that we are all responsible for ourselves and for each other ... a highly compassionate feat of storytelling

—— Metro

Entwining history, politics and personal events, this is an ambitious novel that is, and will continue to be, highly culturally relevant

—— Big Issue

Astoundingly ambitious

—— New Books

Ambition and talent don't always go hand-in-hand; here they unquestionably do

—— Daily Mail

Tracing the descendants of two women across seven generations, this unflinching debut from Ghanaian-American author Yaa Gyasi examines the lingering effects of slavery from the 18th-century Gold Coast to the US at the turn of the 21st century

—— Financial Times

Ambitious, multi-generational saga of the effects of the slave trade

—— Guardian Books of the Year
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