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Learn Love in a Week
Learn Love in a Week
Jan 2, 2026 2:45 PM

Author:Andrew Clover

Learn Love in a Week

Polly has been married to Arthur for ten years when she meets James Hammond. He's her Road Not Taken. The One That Got Away. He's also rich, and in one week he's inviting her to his hotel in the country to give her the job she's always wanted. He also wants her.

Polly is so tempted. Arthur is gorgeous, but he's grumpy. He insists he can change, but can he? After ten years, can you learn to love? And if you could, would you still choose your partner?

Reviews

Full of laugh-out-loud moments

—— Sunday Mirror

The funniest book about relationships I've read in years

—— Lisa Jewell

This is the kind of book that draws looks from strangers if read in public as it will have you laughing so much. More than just a fun read it’s also a saucy, modern fable that offers food for thought about distancing ourselves from our stresses, thwarted dreams and frustrations and working out what is really important.

—— Daily Express

Funny, well observed and moving. This book will make you smile

—— Candis

I laughed a thousand times and cried once. I rushed through it.

—— Christina Hopkinson, author of The Pile of Stuff at the Bottom of the Stairs

Loving a woman, raising a family and living a life have never seemed so funny. A brilliant and hilarious comic novel.

—— Giles Coren

Superb. Touching and wise, but best of all very funny, with cracking one-liners and amusing scenes on nearly every page that made me laugh out loud and the other passengers on my train move to a different carriage.

—— Shouty Dad blog

Author Andrew Clover’s foray into the female psyche is totally spot-on, but it’s his male character’s perspective that’s refreshingly realistic

—— Now Magazine

Great fun

—— Daily Mail

Hilarious

—— Full House Magazine

an enjoyable creepy read with the psychological depth that Sophie Hannah is known for

—— Rich Tapestry Reads

this bestselling writer knows how to pile on the tension ... and her ending is chillingly, memorably disturbing

—— Culture, The Sunday Times

Sophie Hannah is a genius at creating and building tension and this book is no different.

—— Between the Lines is an Endless Story

a beautifully constructed, atmospheric chiller which I highly recommend

—— Joanne-Sheppard

Her trademark precision-layered structure creates a multi-dimensional maze that holds at its centre a revelation which is truly hair-raising

—— Independent on Sunday

Cool, calculating and utterly chilling… to be gulped down with all the lights on and someone to grab when the sense of menace grows too great.

—— Observer

Sophie Hannah is a real star.

—— Daily Telegraph

Sophie Hannah has quickly established herself as a doyenne of the 'home horror' school of psychological tension, taking domestic situations and wringing from them dark, gothic thrills.

—— Financial Times

Hannah is a master of intense psychological thrillers . . . Full of twists and turns, and terrifying, too.

—— heat

She grips from start to finish - a grip which held me against my will because the sustained atmosphere of mild hysteria is hard to take . . . I couldn't put it down.

—— Literary Review

NoViolet Bulawayo has created a world that lives and breathes - and fights, kicks, screams and scratches, too. She has clothed it in words and given it a voice at once dissonant and melodic, utterly distinct

—— Aminatta Forna

NoViolet Bulawayo's We Need New Names is an exquisite and powerful first novel, filled with an equal measure of beauty and horror and laughter and pain. The lives (and names) of these characters will linger in your mind, and heart, long after you're done reading the book. No Violet Bulawayo is definitely a writer to watch

—— Edwidge Danticat

I knew this writer was going to blow up. Her honesty, her voice, her formidable command of her craft -- all were apparent from the first page.

—— Junot Diaz

I was bowled over... by NoViolet Bulawayo's shatteringly good first novel, We Need New Names

—— Anne Tyler, Good Housekeeping

NoViolet Bulawayo is a powerful, authentic, nihilistic voice - feral, feisty, funny - from the new Zimbabwean generation that has inherited Robert Mugabe's dystopia

—— Peter Godwin, author of When a Crocodile Eats the Sun

A work of gritty naturalism

—— Adam Kirsch , Prospect

Witty... ebullient... heartbreaking... our feisty heroine's sparkle never dims

—— i

A truthful, profound snapshot of the kind of life that often gets overlooked. Moving, fresh, enlightening. A fantastic novel

—— Alice , Waterstone's Aberystwyth

A fresh, engaging take on the relationship between rich and poor

—— Wanderlust

A bittersweet coming-of-age tale of displacement during the southern African nation's 'lost decade'

—— Voice

A tale of our time, a powerful condemnation of global inequality from the point of view of a 10-year-old in impossible circumstances... a stunning piece of literary craftsmanship

—— Weekly Telegraph

Bulawayo, whose prose is warm and clear and unfussy, maintains Darling's singular voice throughout, even as her heroine struggles to find her footing. Her hard, funny first novel is a triumph.

—— Entertainment Weekly

Wonderfully, this is a novel whipped with the complexities of African identities in a post-colonial and globalised world and its most compelling theme is that of contemporary displacement, a theme that will resonate with many readers

—— We Sat Down Blog

This is a young author to watch

—— Suzi Feay , Financial Times

This is a very readable tale, thanks to some excellent writing and its central character: a likeable heroine in a difficult world

—— Sarah Warwick , UK Regional Press Syndication

We Need New Names is a distinct and hyper-contemporary treatment of the old You Can’t Go Home Again mould, and the book has more than enough going for it to easily graduate from the Booker longlist to the final six

—— Richard Woolley , Upcoming

deeply felt and fiercely written first novel

—— Scotsman

Bulawayo's novel may scream Africa, but her deft and often comic prose captures memories and tastes, among them the bitterness of disappointment, that transcend borders

—— Jake Flanagin , Atlantic

Bulawayo excels... there is an inevitable nod to Achebe and the verbal delights and child's-eye view of the world is redolent of The God of Small Things. Otherwise, the magic is all Bulawayo's own

—— Literary Review

Proof again that the Caine prize for African writers really knows how to pick a winner… [It’s] a tour de force. Ten-year-old Darling is an unforgettable and necessary new voice: add her to the literary cannon

—— Jackie Kay , Observer

This brilliant novel was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize

—— Marie Claire UK

An exceptionally fine novel, as powerful and memorable as Coetzee's magnificent Disgrace... We need new novels like this – authentic, original and cathartic

—— Judy Moir , Herald

There is no doubt that a new star of African female writing is truly born. The one-to-watch

—— New African

Follow ten-year-old Darling from the Paradise shantytown to America in this searing indictment of Mugabe’s Zimbabwe

—— Patricia Nicol , Metro

Shocking, often heartbreaking – but also pulsing with energy

—— The Times

A poignant, witty, original and lyrical coming of age story

—— Caroline Jowett , Daily Express

Talented and ambitious

—— Helon Habila , Guardian

A powerful fictional condemnation of global inequality

—— Sunday Telegraph

From the opening chapter…the first-person narrative achieves a breathtaking vibrancy, ambition and pathos

—— Irish Examiner

Deserved all the publicity it got

—— Michela Wrong , Spectator
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