Author:James Hawes
John Goode is a leftie lecturer who just wants to give his beloved wife and kids a normal life. You know: north London, good schools, nice neighbours, sash windows... yes, you know. But who can afford that kind of normal these days?
Goode can only daydream of becoming a television academic, or else of a bloody great economic crash that would make his job worth something again. So when he stumbles on a long-buried assault rifle whilst planting plum-trees for his children, he soon begins to wonder if this might be just the tool to seriously renegociate his family's future...
Hawes has developed into a prolifically inventive and increasingly subtle satirist. Though the current novel features all his regular trademarks - black humour, sharp dialogue and a plot that goes off with all guns blazing in every respect - one senses that this book is also Hawes's homage to one of the great academic satires of the last century, Malcolm Bradbury's The History Man
—— GuardianVery witty... Both laddish and slyly intelligent, Hawes has his cake and eats it
—— Daily TelegraphTerrific black satire
—— Toby Clements , Daily TelegraphHawes scatters pellets of satirical wit on the twitchy paranoia of the ageing liberal
—— ArenaFerguson fills his pages with fascinating historical detail and lovingly described cons. His lengthy descriptions of scams are enthralling, funny and perhaps even educational
—— GuardianThe novel makes no pretence of providing unambiguous answers, but takes us on a beguiling, questing journey
—— Nick Rennison , Sunday TimesMurray Bail marshals the tensions between his characters and their ideas to great effect
—— Peter Scott , The TelegraphA gratifyingly dry wit pervades this novel of ideas
—— Chris Ross , The GuardianTruly gripping
—— Big IssueOpening with a mysterious yet distressing anecdote about a girl driving dangerously, Peter Ferry's first novel immediately captures the reader's imagination, drawing you into a story filled with humour, tenderness and suspense... The novel is as entertaining as it is intriguing and is not to be missed
—— AestheticaA very neat piece of storytelling
—— William Leith , Evening StandardA neat piece of storytelling
—— Johanna Thomas-Corr , ScotsmanA lovely and heartbreaking book . . . Julia Glass writes the sort of novels you wish would go on forever; such is your immediate attachment to her impeccably drawn characters . . . [she] offers up intimate examinations of the lives on complex people, recognizable for their insecurities and strengths, failings and successes, humor and sadness, loves and loves lost.
—— Miami HeraldAn arresting story that is both thorny and complex ... A wonderful novelist will expose truths that elude us in the everyday. [Glass's] eye in I See You Everywhere takes in blind spots and makes them mesmerizing
—— New York Daily NewsJulia Glass is a writer firmly in control
—— Dallas Morning NewsGlass elegantly captures what it means to be an independent and spirited contemporary woman
—— Chicago TribuneBeautifully written
—— Image MagazineIt is expertly written in its way, and oddly compelling - like a slushy movie you can't help but respond to
—— GuardianMoving and thoughtful ... Poignant and compelling, this lyrical novel lifts the veil on an internal world of love, rivalry and misunderstanding; an intricate depiction of sibling relationships
—— Good Book GuideA beautifully evocative and intelligent novel
—— Woman & HomeThis impassioned tale is a gripping read
—— James Smart , The GuardianJones is fabulous...offering titbits of danger and discord, yet keeping a cool matter-of-fact tone for the big horrors
—— Sunday TimesHer second novel is a must-read; a devastating, brilliant account of what happens when everything a man believes in...begins to crumble
—— Cath Kidson MagazineFull of danger and discord
—— Sunday Times Summer Reading