Author:Maureen Duffy
Many of the Londoners in this novel are outcasts - some are criminals in society’s eyes. Most are descended from adventurers and immigrants. The worlds they inhabit - the bedsit; the cruisers’ pub - lie cheek by jowl with the worlds of the affluent and successful - the smart restaurant, the House of Commons Committee room.
Al, the narrator, is a Londoner born and bred, a writer living in a small room in West London. Most of the other residents in the cavernous Victorian house - and the friends and acquaintances Al meets in tow local pubs, the bohemian and relaxed crowd at the Nevern and the slightly more ambiguous and dangerous crowd at the Knacker’s - are Londoners by adoption, some temporary exiles, some permanent.
One of the most influential intellectuals of our time
—— ObserverA remarkable evocation of another time and another frame of reference
—— Daily TelegraphJulia Blackburn has an extraordinary talent for thinking herlsef into other worlds... Reading her book, you experience the uncanny sensation that you have somehow always known these places
—— Evening StandardShe wears her talents like a modern Renaissance woman with elegance and affable ease
—— The TimesA brilliant and very readable portrait of the mother-daughter relationship
—— CandisBrown's winning debut teaches a hopeful truth: Sometimes, just as you're starting to drown, things fall back into place.
—— PeoplePart Desperate Housewives, part American Beauty - entirely gripping
—— ScarletA razor-sharp critique of the absurd expectations that, these days, have come to stand for ambition, "All We Ever Wanted Was Everything" is wrenching, riveting, and still manages to be great fun. This is a wise, intimate chronicle of one family's struggle to take off their masks and live in the place they most feared: the real, imperfect world
—— Meghan Daum, author of 'The Quality of Life Report'Rarely does a first novelist write with such confidence and grace. 'All We Ever Wanted Was Everything' is a marvelous book
—— Ayelet Waldman, author of "Love and Other Impossible PursuitsHill's taut prose exudes a constant darkness... you are left unsettled and haunted by the seeming inevitability of their troubled lives
—— StylistTaut, tense story, written with that unsparing economy which is such a feature of Hill's recent fiction
—— Matthew Dennison , The TimesThe versatile Hill tells a perfectly judged story of people living hard, narrow lives
—— ObserverSo well-written, so deeply imagined, that the reader will find delight even in the encircling gloom. Love may not conquer all, but Art can
—— Scotsman[Hill] does what all good writers must set out to do: she made me read until I had the answer
—— M J Hyland , GuardianHill’s sparse style provides the perfect medium for exploring this family’s predicament
—— Matthew Dennison , The TImesHill does a wonderful job of evoking life in this enclosed community
—— Emma Hagestadt , IndependentA masterpiece of economy and control
—— Good Book Guide