Author:Adriaan Van Dis

In Repatriated the world is a dangerous place and the bomb is ticking - at home and abroad.
In a seaside town in the Netherlands, Mr Java - a war damaged ex-colonial - drills his son for the future, drawing him deeper and deeper into his delusionary world. As the radio broadcasts news of H bomb tests, Mr Java writes letters of complaint to the authorities, dreams of horses, and stands at the front window, on the look out for special security spies and nuclear holocaust. His wife and her three daughters from a previous marriage in Indonesia form a sort of Greek chorus, providing a sceptical commentary as his obsessions build towards a dark, absurdist climax.
Repatriated is an inventive, blackly funny novel that shows an adolescent boy trying to break free from his parents and finding he cannot escape their past.
Unsettling, challenging and gloriously written, Hot Milk by Deborah Levy is the multi-generational story of a hallucinatory sort of summer
—— Juliet Nicolson, Evening StandardLeaves the reader enraptured and unnerved
—— Jackie Annesley, Evening StandardPublisher's description. Shortlisted for the Man Booker and Goldsmiths prizes, a hypnotic tale of female sexuality and power under the scorching midday sun. Sofia and her mother arrive on the Spanish coast looking for answers - what they find there will be strange, seductive and fearsome beyond their wildest dreams.
—— PenguinVibrant...an intense, sun-drenched story. The prose veers dizzily between the poetic and the convoluted, spreading a hallucinatory patina of weirdness over everything. This is a writer for whom ordinary language just will not do.
—— The TimesAn extraordinary novel, beautifully rich, vividly atmospheric and psychologically complex. Every woman should read it
—— Bernardine Evaristo, author of MR LOVERMANSo mesmerising that reading it is to be under a spell...Sex suffuses the novel, with pleasure frequently crossing into pain
—— Independent on SundayA smart, seductive and utterly beguiling read
—— Mail on SundayElegant and deeply strange [and] hummingly funny throughout
—— SpectatorWhat makes the book so good is Ms. Levy's great imagination, the poetry of her language [and] moving gracefully among pathos, danger and humor
—— New York TimesGripping... an elegant and eerie tale.
—— ShortlistMcCarthy’s crisp, clean prose is stimulating, his concepts original and his visual imagery powerful.
—— Leyla Sanai , Independent on Sunday[An] entertaining slice of experimental fiction.
—— Sunday ExpressBooker-nominated author Tom McCarthy’s latest offering is lean, smart and infuriating.
—— Charlotte Heathcote , Sunday ExpressMcCarthy's writing is cool and elegant, descriptive, yet informal and conversational.
—— Curious Animal MagazineAn intellectually challenging and highly engaging work of art.
—— JP O’Malley , Washington PostIt is dead-clever, very funny, insanely ambitious, sometimes insane, essentially brilliant and commendably engaged with the way we’re living our lives right now.
—— Stuart Hammond , Dazed DigitalReading a McCarthy novel is like being in a McCarthy novel: everything is part of a fizzing network, the scope of which can never be fully apprehended.
—— Duncan White , TelegraphWithout beginning, middle, end – and especially lacking centre! – the novel comes to a halt, leaving the reader in a gorgeous daze of symbol and cypher, whose meaning is so clear, and yet tantalizingly opaque.
—— Aisling O’Gara , Totally DublinSatin Island is clever, vogue, slick and sleek.
—— Tamim Sadikali , Book MunchPacked with intriguing and intellectual ideas… refreshingly thought-provoking.
—— Good Book GuideSlender, foxily postmodern.
—— Sam Leith , Radio TimesThe bleeding edge of science fiction is Satin Island.
—— InterzoneIn Satin Island the narrator, U, takes us on a journey through the modern world of ideas, theories and references. It’s a wonderfully intense experience – as soon as I’d finished I wanted to read it again.
—— Edith Bowman , Radio TimesConvincing proof that the best writers of our time are anthropologists.
—— Anna Aslanyan , The SpectatorFavourite novel of 2015.
—— John Banville , ObserverA darkly funny and disturbing meditation on the intricacies and insubstantiality of our technology-ridden times. McCarthy is one of the most daring, most ambitious and most subtle of what at my age I can all the younger generation of writers.
—— John Banville , Irish TimesThe novel often reads like a dramatic monologue, a very modern stream of consciousness, akin to Joyce’s Finnegans Wake… McCarthy’s novel is innovative, well crafted and challenging… This novel is breaking new ground, a breath of fresh air, at times a tour de force.
—— Vincent Hanley , Irish TimesMcCarthy has put his finger on something, and he’s nailed it very precisely. It’s how we live now. All the information we process every day. What it’s doing to us.
—— William Leith , Evening Standard