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Living In Perhaps
Living In Perhaps
Aug 2, 2025 4:56 PM

Author:Julia Widdows

Living In Perhaps

Carol has always resented her family - her mother, endlessly knitting, her father and his obsession with next door's encroaching garden hedge, and her brother, ever silent and scheming.

So when she is invited to meet the vibrant, bohemian family next door in their messy house full of books and paintings and empty of rules, Carol soon begins a secret double life over the much-hated garden hedge. Here Carol voices her greatest fantasy and tells her first major lie...that she is adopted.

But on her 16th birthday Carol receives the shock of her life when her wish comes true. And as, years later, Carol frenetically narrates her story from a psychiatric unit, we realise how it affected her and those around her in the darkest of ways...

Reviews

An enthralling collection of characters who quickly draw you right into their sinister world. An absolute gem, I couldn't put it down

—— Kate Long, author of The Bad Mother's Handbook

Day-dreamy Carol, the wryly funny and acerbically observant narrator, teasingly reveals her story . . . in this smart, sad and funny debut

—— Daily Mail

A dark, witty and heart breaking novel where fantasy and reality collide with devastating consequences

—— bettybookmark.co.uk (5 stars)

King is a master of idiom and street slang. He speaks with a voice that appears to be the true expression of disaffected white British youth

—— The Times

Beaumont has spread his wings with Small World, ditching the out and out comedy for some sharp social analysis, but retaining his knack for a witty, punchy story

—— Metro

Heartfelt story of illicit love ... What's so interesting about Addonia's novel, though, is that it shows a man suffering from the consequences of the repression of women ... The frustration and loneliness he experiences living in a male-oriented world are powerfully depicted, as are the inertia, corruption and hypocrisy that flourish when morality is regulated by the state

—— Literary Review

This tale of forbidden passion is tense and provocative... Compelling

—— Maire Claire

An intense and moving glimpse into a world where love is an impossible dream

—— The Times

Beautifully written, with an imaginative and poetic narrative style

—— Aesthetica

A treat for literature lovers who appreciate complexity in their novels and aren't afraid to deal with tough topics

—— Library Journal

Harvey's novel bravely reimagines the horrors of Alzheimer's from within the ever-narrowing parameters of an architect's mind

—— New York Times

Closer to Virginia Woolf's meditative novels than anything else I can think of

—— Washington Post

A forensic examination of loss and misunderstanding, a paean to the vital force of stories, and an incredibly moving look at a sword of Damocles that hangs over us all.

—— Tom Webber , Observer

Harvey shows her remarkable powers of empathy and her no less remarkable literary skill. To write about a disordered mind is to court the danger of creating a work that is itself disordered. But from start to finish her control is absolute....I can think of few more distinguished literary debuts in recent years

—— Francis King , Literary Review

Moving, convincing, adroit- it is a remarkably accomplished first novel and a beautiful jacket

—— Susan Hill , The Lady

Harvey's is certainly the outstanding fictional debut to have come my way this year

—— Francis King , The Oldie

Intricately and delicately woven

—— Lucy Atkins , Sunday Times

Impressive first novel [which] plays some original tricks with narrative

—— Ophelia Field , Sunday Telegraph Magazine

An extremely gifted writer

—— Independent on Sunday

Deeply original and captivating...The lyrical power of these shifting and competing narratives is matched by the absolute emotional realism of Jake's own desperate plight: his shame and anger and impotence are devastatingly recorded. And yet this is not a depressing novel, but rather one so full of urgent life that it rouses even as it terrifies.

—— Olivia Laing , The Observer

Many novels have documented the trials of living with dementia, but this mind-bending debut throws us straight into the skewed recesses of a sufferer's brain... An exhilarating trip, but for the thought that this is a place some of us might visit one day.

—— Emma Hagestadt , Independent
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