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Sisters
Nov 3, 2025 5:58 PM

Author:Louisa May Alcott

Sisters

Your sister might be the kindred soul who knows you best, or the most alien being in your household; she might enrage you or inspire you; she might be your fiercest competitor or closest co-conspirator, but she'll always share with you a totally unique bond. Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy are four of the most famous sisters in literature, and these stories of the joys and heartaches they share are a touching celebration of the special ties of sisterhood.

Selected from the books Little Women and Good Wives by Louisa May Alcott

VINTAGE MINIS: GREAT MINDS. BIG IDEAS. LITTLE BOOKS.

A series of short books by the world’s greatest writers on the experiences that make us human

Also in the Vintage Minis series:

Fatherhood by Karl Ove Knausgaard

Motherhood by Helen Simpson

Babies by Anne Enright

Love by Jeanette Winterson

Reviews

Six generations of readers have found in the story of the March family universal truths about girls, families and growing up

—— Guardian

Imagine our joy when Vintage announced that it is publishing a collection of easily digestible books from the world’s most celebrated writers on the experiences that make us human… They look good and read well. That’s win/win in our book.

—— Stylist

Ancient, brooding technologies...Renegade slaves in a stolen starships...In Bannister’s hands space opera lives on, gaudy and brutal and glorious. The Spin Doctor is back.

—— STEPHEN BAXTER

With Bannister's debut novel, Creation Machine, we seemed to have struck a nugget of SF gold. With Iron Gods our luck continues and it seems that with this new author we may well have found a vein of the stuff.

—— CONCATENATION

Moshfegh is… a superlative short-story writer… McGlue, which owes as much to Cormac McCarthy as it does to Poe or Melville, is an entertaining curio with some lovely baroque flourishes.

—— Alasdair Lees , Independent

A haunting men-on-boats noir, Ottessa Moshfegh’s first work of fiction… is Moby Dick through a broken, twisted looking glass. Moshfegh writes a fascinating, ugly form of brotherhood, shot through with homophobic homoeroticism, violence and taboo. It is a pungent novella, that revels in its own foulness with a wink and a nudge… Moshfegh’s sharp, strangely textured prose makes McGlue shock in all the right ways.

—— Gill Moore , Totally Dublin

The mixture of brutality and tenderness was so surprising and moving to me

—— Patrick deWitt , Guardian

Full of nostalgia and gentleness as well as being sharply observant

—— Stylist

Chingonyi’s poems are full of questions that need asking. His gift is for pushing poems further than you expected them to go. [A] striking quest of a debut

—— Poetry Book of the Month, Kate Kellaway , Observer

Powerful… These poems are essential and urgent and shine a light on British culture in an unique and spellbinding way

—— Elle, ‘10 'Woke' Works Of Literature You Need To Add To Your Reading List This Year’

Kumakanda is an essential collection from one of the UK's most exciting poets. Kayo's poetry is beautiful, thoughtful, musical and nostalgic

—— Nikesh Shukla

A wonderful debut: music, race, deracination, love and death are all woven into a compelling portrait of a young man growing up, rendered in poems that are elegant yet conversational, fluent yet profoundly skillful, touched with heart-stopping lyricism. For the reader, an initiation not to be missed

—— Henry Shukman

When James Baldwin described the writer's goal as stringing together sentences that were as clean as a bone, he wasn't to know that poet Kayo Chingonyi's debut collection Kumukanda would achieve exactly that

—— Rianna Jade Parker , Vice UK

The title poem Kumukanda is elegant, eloquent and moving... For all the particularity of his subject matters and his openness in exploring them, it’s the fine and sophisticated writing that makes me return to these poems

—— Jane Routh , Magma Poetry

Exceedingly powerful; by turns furious, tender and bittersweet, taking as it does the overall theme of in-betweens. Ancestry versus contemporary rites of passage. The ambiguous versus the undeniable. Who you are, and who you choose to be seen as, versus who others perceive you to be

—— Clare Mulley , Skinny

Chingonyi is the living writer who inspires and influences me the most

—— Derek Owusu , Big Issue

A beautiful exploration of grief and boyhood... Each poem is delivered with such precision and deftness

—— Evening Standard

Underground Airlines is a powerful work … a brave, controversial thriller.

—— Crime Fiction Lover

A great premise … but slavery scenes will haunt you.

—— WEstern Daily Press

An almost painfully timely novel.

—— Sci-Fi Now

Winters does an amazing job of painting a world that never was but, in his hands, is frighteningly plausible … Winters has crafted a thrilling, tightly plotted and nourish thriller.

—— Independent

If you’re looking for a brilliant, smart, chilling page turner for what’s left of the summer, I can recommend Ben H. Winters.

—— Daily Mirror

Winters does an amazing job of painting a world that next we was, but in his hands, are frighteningly plausible … Winters could not have written a more timely novel.

—— Belfast Telegraph

Groundbreaking.

—— Pride Magazine

A really intriguing premise.

—— Anna's Reading List

On the surface, Underground Airlines is a well-crafted thriller, suspenseful and with fascinating characters. But not far below the surface is a philosophical debate about how one small change of events in history can put the world on a different path.

—— Mystery People

‘Intriguing’

—— SFX

There is more than one idiot in this delightful and slyly funny coming-of-age novel... Will strike a chord for any former fresher who felt the same way. (That would be all of us.)

—— Sarra Manning , Red

Batuman, in seemingly writing a novel about nothing, has produced an incredibly complex, accurate and funny novel.

—— Rachael Revesz , Independent

I never want to finish it, so I’m reading it very slowly.

—— Lauren Waterman , ELLE

Every page is thicketed with jokes, riffs, theories of language. It’s a portrait of an intellectual and sentimental education that offers almost unseemly pleasure.

—— Parhul Sehgal , New York Times

Elif Batuman is a real writer, and should be allowed to write whatever the hell she likes.

—— Daniel Soar , London Review of Books

Selin’s deadpan narration is often very funny indeed

—— Leaf Arbuthnot , Sunday Times

This is a capacious book that creates an alternative world

—— Lara Feigel , Guardian

At once clever and clueless, Batuman’s heroine shows us with just how messy it can be to forge a self

—— London Property South

One of the best novels I read all summer... a painstakingly accurate depiction of the balancing act that is student-life. As clever as it is funny, Batuman's debut novel allows us to laugh at our own stupidity, and celebrate our own cluelessness.

—— Varsity

The Idiot... manages the trick of being laugh-out-loud funny while not actually being a comedy. It just observers life, in all its truth and is hilarious for page after page.

—— Patrick Ness , Guardian

I finally read The Idiot by Elif Batuman and everyone is correct, she is clearly a genius

—— White Review, *Books of the Year*
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