Author:Lissa Evans

'Bloody funny, bloody moving - bloody buy it!' - Meera Syal
Some people live life in the fast lane. Others have stalled and are waiting for assistance on the side of the road, sustained only by the piece of chewing gum they've just found in the glove compartment.
Spencer's ex-lover has died, leaving him a lizard and a list of things to do before the end of the year.
Spencer's friend Fran shares a house and a mortgage with her brother and his girlfriend, a woman with delicate wrists and a bloated cat.
Fran's neighbour Iris is slave to the three men in her life: an aging father who likes the phone and two teenage sons who cannot fathom the washing machine.
Maybe it's not about living life in the fast lane. It's about learning to live at all.
Spencer's List is a wonderfully funny tale of life lived on the edge - of reason, of failure and of (just possibly) a brighter future.
Featuring an extract of the next book by Lissa Evans, V FOR VICTORY
Bloody funny, bloody moving - bloody buy it!
—— Meera SyalVery funny and very real - a lovely book
—— Graham NortonA funny, warm-hearted and intelligent debut
—— John O'FarrellGrass is one of the few great writers in Europe today
—— Daily TelegraphA novelist who is also a true poet
—— Sunday TimesOne of Brazil’s finest authors offers a meditation on betrayal, guilt, survival and the many ways in which personal and collective histories collide.
—— Financial Times, Best Books of 2017The narrator is. . . a Nick Carraway-type whose apparent detachment eventually collapses to reveal deep emotion. In this sly and unexpected novel, Laub asks how some thrive in spite of trauma and others fall apart in the face of success.
—— Financial TimesAn erudite page-turner.
—— LadyIt’s wonderful how Emily Hauser brings alive this Bronze Age world . . . this is immersive writing, marvellously descriptive and evocative . . . an elegant, exciting and in some ways moving story.
—— Kate Atherton , For Winter NightsIt is Atalanta, determined to prove herself every bit as good as a man, who turns this into a story which speaks to us . . . Despite the will of the gods, she is very clearly in charge of her own destiny. It is this mixture of feminism and self-determination which makes For the Winner a very modern and relevant novel.
—— Historical Novel SocietyThis is the sort of story I dreamed of covering when I was a journalist. The sort of story for which the phrase You couldn’t make it up was invented. The Adversary takes a deep, mesmerising dive into the darkness of a human soul. There were moments when I truly could not believe what I was reading. But unlike other serial killer noirs sitting on my shelves, this horror is real. And so much more chilling for that.
—— Fiona Barton, author of The Widow[A] book that fairly struck me over the head was The Adversary… it’s the coexistence of almost unimaginably variant realities within a family that haunts you.
—— Megan Nolan , New Statesman, *Books of the Year*A remarkably thoughtful and unnerving book...mesmerising
—— Sunday TelegraphProfoundly disturbing...a remarkable and undoubtedly important book - perhaps even a necessary one
—— Daily ExpressA fascinating meditation on Jean-Claude Romand and what his bizarre life might mean... Carrère's inquiry is highly personal, written in lucid prose...the narrative is often mesmerizing, and revealing about the fragility of human relationships
—— New York TimesAs a writer, Carrère is straight berserk; as a storyteller he is so freakishly talented, so unassuming in grace and power that you only realize the hold he's got on you when you attempt to pull away... You say: True crime and Literature? I don't believe it. I say: Believe it
—— Junot DíazJustifiably considered the French In Cold Blood
—— Paris ReviewThe sense of dread he conveys is authentic – it is a loss of self, of connection to the world...dystopian
—— London Review of BooksIt’s fascinating, watching Carrere dig around in Romand’s inner life… By the end you feel this clever, intriguing book is too good for its banal human subject.
—— Robbie Millen , The TimesDark, strange, astonishing.
—— Marcel Theroux , Big IssueA jaw-dropping tale of murder and deception that goes right to the heart of what it means to be human... The perfect antidote to an excess of sunshine
—— Paul Murray, author of THE BEE STING , Observer, *Summer Reads of 2023*The perfect antidote to Trump.
—— Sarah Churchwell , GuardianThis book is a compelling study of the relationship between artist and spectator, and how suffering feeds into art, and he’s made of it a bravura performance… Extraordinary.
—— Alastair Mabbott , HeraldA haunting, intense and Man Booker International prize-winning novel from a great writer.
—— Mail on SundayIncredibly fast paced, and the dialogue comes at you like a machine gun… It is powerful in its own right.
—— Sara Garland , NudgeAbrasive, unexpected and eventually heartbreaking, it is a masterclass in characterisation and structure, and it beat off some exceptionally strong competition to win the prize… A Horse Walks into a Bar is quite unlike any other Grossman book except in one important respect: it’s another masterpiece.
—— Nick Barley , New StatesmanExcellent.
—— Dara Ó Briain , ObserverPitch-perfect black comedy
—— Salman Rushdie , Guardian