Author:Anna McPartlin

If you laughed and cried reading Anna McPartlin's bestselling story The Last Days of Rabbit Hayes or Alice Oseman's Heartstopper, then Somewhere Inside of Happy will have you smiling and tearful all over again.
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'And just like that my boy was gone.'
Maisie Brennan is standing on a podium on the twentieth anniversary of the death of her son, trying to find the first breath that will help her start talking to a room full of strangers. A daunting task at the best of times, but she's also menopausal and one hot flush away from totally losing it.
But as Maisie begins her story, she soon relaxes and word by word disappears into her past, back to 1st January 1995 – the day when one misunderstood action led to a chain of events that changed her life for ever...
THE most beautiful book - compassionate, gritty, warm, authentic, uplifting.
—— Marian KeyesMy heart was ripped right out. I couldn’t put it down.
—— Adele ParksAn emotional roller coaster of a read
—— Good HousekeepingBrims with life . . . and will keep you thoroughly gripped until the truth is revealed.
—— Sunday MirrorWarm Irish humour lifts this book into another realm.
—— My WeeklyA highly readable novel… Freya herself is an impressive creation.
—— Claire Lowdon , Sunday TimesHere is a modern woman to be celebrated in all her contradictions and complexity. It’s fun to be in her company.
—— Nick Curtis , Evening StandardOne to lose yourself in.
—— BooksellerEnjoyed last year’s critically-acclaimed Curtain Call? Then you’ll love Anthony Quinn’s forthcoming novel Freya… Quinn is a gifted storyteller with a particular talent for creating distinctive, believable characters and setting individual lives against key historical moments.
—— Winq MagazineA detailed character sketch… Very convincing and highly readable.
—— Phil Ramage , NudgeThe novel fluently pits a determinedly feminised consciousness against a rapidly changing England divided over immigration, gay rights and a burgeoning youth culture… [Freya is] brilliant, modern, wilful and a fascinatingly unreliable witness to her own flawed character… [Quinn’s] skill at depicting social and political turbulence through the prism of personal experience proves just as nimble [as his previous novels].
—— Claire Allfree , Daily MailQuinn’s willingness fully to detail each of his scenes attests to his years as a film critic… It is a big but nuanced work.
—— Wynn Wheldon , SpectatorHugely impressive new novel… The novel is satisfyingly complex and sets you thinking, but most of all you read it, at a gallop in my case, because of the sheer quality of Quinn’s prose – the apparent effortlessness with which he pulls off plotting, pacing and period features… Above all there is his ear for dialogue. The whole is a pure pleasure.
—— Peter Stanford , TabletFreya is one of those rare, sympathetic novels that improves the more time the reader gives it.
—— David Renton , Literary ReviewIt is the relationship between the reader and Freya that is most powerful. And, in the end, it is more real than the friendship between Freya and Nancy as you find yourself hoping that this sharp, contrary woman succeeds.
—— Alice Thomson , The TimesA remarkable portrait of post-war British society, the changing role of women and the barriers faced by female writers… Quinn has a lightness of touch and his deep empathy for his subject makes Freya an engrossing and memorable read.
—— Charlotte Heathcote , Daily ExpressBrilliantly suspenseful novel… His skill lies in his ability to milk all the nostalgic appeal of his milieu… Quinn is too sharp-eyed, and even his most outlandish characters can bewitch and repel in equal measure. He is particularly good on the trancelike self-absorption of youth… Chapters crescendo towards cliffhanger endings, and the narrative hips on to its immensely satisfying end.
—— Oldie , Emily BearnA particularly well-drawn study of a strong-willed and abrasive young woman determined to make her way in a man’s world.
—— Simon Shaw , Mail on SundayFunny and heartfelt
—— i (The paper for today)Really good books have a way of transporting the reader to places they'd never normally go to, opening their eyes to experiences and isssues they wouldn't otherwise consider. Meera Syal does all this and more. A beautifully written novel about female friendship, surrogacy and the problems of late parenthood.
—— Eastern EyeRich, sensual, earthy and utterly unforced. I was transported.
—— MICHAEL ATTENBOROUGH, CBEAlive with malice and grace, this is a taut tale reminiscent of the nightmares of Patricia Highsmith
—— MrsD-DailyPrey and predators circle in lush southeast Asian settings that gleam with Osborne’s dazzling skill as a travel-writer
—— Peter Kemp , Sunday TimesIt shines with intrigue, with investigations into the nature of the non-rational, and evil, wrapped up in taught plotting
—— Arifa Akbar , IndependentOne of Britain’s most accomplished novelists.
—— Ed Cumming , ObserverAn ingenious and atmospheric novel.
—— Simon Shaw , Mail on SundayLawrence Osborne is an experienced, competent author with an impressive knowledge of Asia… Comparisons with Graham Greene seem to be generously offered by other reviewers and I’ve already alluded to Conrad and a Patricia Highsmith yet my impression is that Mr. Osborne has a style all of his own.
—— Gill Chedgey , NudgeMcCarthy 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