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Mountains of the Moon
Mountains of the Moon
Jul 27, 2025 7:40 AM

Author:I J Kay

Mountains of the Moon

A woman in her thirties is released from prison, with a new name and not much else. She begins to make a fresh start but the present is soon invaded by fragments from her past.

Unsettling, hallucinatory and without precedent, Mountains of the Moon is the tragic account of a broken life, but, against all expectation, it amounts to something utterly beautiful.

Reviews

A beautiful, strange novel about drab, dangerous lives. Kay's imagination is exuberant, her language musical and her narrative both fantastically intricate and structurally sound

—— Lucy Hughes-Hallett , New Statesman

A brilliant and sad book… The funniest book I’ve read in years.

—— Olivia Laing , New Statesman, Book of the Year

A valorous and magnificent novel

—— Samantha Harvey

Compelling

—— Erica Wagner , The Times

An astonishingly enjoyable debut ... Mountains of the Moon does everything that novels can do, and does them in a very original way

—— Ophelia Field , Observer

Few 350-page, first-person novels - even fewer contemporary British novels - are unputdownable. This is one of them

—— Eileen Battersby , Irish Times

A startling debut

—— GQ

Sincere, resolute

—— Jonathan Barnes , Literary Review

This extraordinary and quite brilliant first novel describes a life that is bumping along the very bottom...The writing is wonderfully inventive, encompassing grim reality and wild, romantic fantasy, and the true magic lies in the way the author manages to present the fragments as a funny, charming, beautiful whole

—— Kate Saunders , The Times

Remarkable story

—— TLS

The most original book I have read for quite a long time

—— Observer

Riverting ... both disturbing and entertaining, with twisted low-life chracters rivalling any created by Martin Amis or Nicola Barker

—— Leyla Sanai , Spectator

Sounds like a must-read

—— Reading Matters

Utterly remarkable…sad in its depth, but delightful on the shimmering surface… It might only be February, but there's going to need to be some strong competition in the months to come if this doesn't end up being my book of the year

—— The Bookbag

A wonderful survivor’s story… It’s excellent

—— Peter Murchie , British Journal of General Practice

The Innocents has garnered her a next-Zadie-Smith style buzz.

—— Tatler

Segal writes with delicacy, accumulating details that create the texture of Adam and Rachel’s world… Adam is well drawn and not unsympathetic, and Segal has skillfully created a cast of secondary characters, including Ziva, a survivor of the Holocaust.

—— Tina Jackson , Metro

It takes chutzpah to appropriate such a well-loved classic but Segal parallels the two convention-bound worlds with aplomb… [a] classily composed comedy of manners

—— Emma Hagestadt , Independent

Impresive debut…a poised text

—— Elizabeth Buchan , Sunday Times

Wittily observant

—— Caroline Jowett , Daily Express

Hugely enjoyable first novel... The end result falls somewhere between Charlotte Mendelson's When We Were Bad (about a matriarchal Jewish rabbi) and David Nicholl's One Day (with its theme of mismatched love) and is all the more pleasing for that

—— Viv Groskop , Observer

Elegant little novel and a real delight to read

—— BookOxygen.com
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