Author:Rachel Johnson

Shire Hell is the hilarious sequel to Rachel Johnson's brilliant novel Notting Hell in which Mimi and Ralph have managed to escape the city and move to the idyllic Dorset countryside, but have they moved out of the frying pan and into the fire?
**Winner of the Literary Review's infamous Bad Sex in Fiction Award in 2008**
Mimi and Ralph have left social climbing, pushy parenting and their marital problems behind them in London, and moved west to the bucolic green depths of the country.
Or so they though. Yes, there's mud and masses of fresh air, plenty of handsome hayseeds and there's Rose, Mimi's new best friend and Dorset's answer to Martha Stewart. But what should be Shire Heaven is, it turns out, just as tricky to navigate as Notting Hell.
There's low-level conflict between the racehorses in vintage/Diesel/Ralph Lauren and the brood mares in Barbour/Boden, there's guerrilla warfare between the landowners and eco-warriors and naked hostility between Old Money, New Money and No Money.
Yes, in Honeybourne, if you don't have:
1. A landscaped garden with 1,000 acres (minimum) of prime land2. A helipad for your trophy guests3. An organic farm shop selling sixteen sorts of home-made sausages4. Four pony-mad polo-playing children5. A Literary Festival in your mini-stately6. A bottom that looks smackable in jodhpurs
Then, well...you're Mimi, basically.
And that's just the start of her problems. Mimi also has a secret. But can she keep it?
Rachel Johnson is known for her wickedly funny novels The Mummy Diaries and Notting Hell; also available from Penguin is her first non-fiction book A Diary of a Lady.
Anne Fine is right on top form in The Devil Walks, a page-turning sinister tale where the tension mounts to the very end . . . Now read on! A splendid child's introduction to the gothic
—— Marilyn Brocklehurst , The BooksellerA superb and subtle writer . . . a joyful marriage of style and content . . . The Devil Walks is immediately a classic in its own right
—— Mal Peet , GuardianIt is a pitch-perfect Gothic thriller
—— Daily TelegraphRecommended, but not for a dark and stormy night
—— Financial TimesCrackling with suspense, The Devil Walks is a dense psychological thriller set in a richly imagined past. Moody and unsettling, it is filled with intrigue and uncertainty to keep the readers guessing until the last page
—— Jake Hope , The BooksellerThere's a real Turn of the Screw feel to this absorbing ghost tale, a genuine Gothic spinechiller and beautifully told
—— Fiona Noble , The BooksellerChilling, creepy and utterly compelling . . . Fine creates a wonderful sense of place and the devilish captain Severin will haunt your psyche
—— Vanessa Lewis , The BooksellerA journey of true grit and determination for one so young in years. The story alone is superb; add in Enaiatollah's engaging prose and this books sings on the page. Highly recommended
—— BookbagA dissection of the emotional fissures that tear families apart
—— Mail on SundayThe novel...is thoughtful and beautifully written, examining lost lives, chances and choices
—— Daily MailA sort of historical treatise follows, one that is devoid of the kind of colourful details which abound in stereotypical lottery daydreams, but which nevertheless endears the reader to Andy and his cause, and sets up an enticing conclusion'
—— Sunday Business Post