Author:Karl Ove Knausgaard,Anna Bjerger,Ingvild Burkey

Spring is a deeply moving novel about family, our everyday lives, our joys and our struggles, beautifully illustrated by Anna Bjerger.
'Moving... A circadian novel, set over one day... Entirely ingenious' Daily Telegraph
Spring follows a father and his newborn daughter through one day in April, from sunrise to sunset. It is a day filled with the small joys of family life, but also its deep struggles. With this striking novel in the Seasons quartet, Karl Ove Knausgaard reflects uncompromisingly on life's darkest moments and what can sustain us through them.
'Fall in love with the world, Knausgaard enjoins, stay sensitive to it, stay in it' New York Times
Entirely ingenious. Knausgaard isn’t afraid to be gauche, anxious, vulgar, inconsistent, portentous, sentimental. He makes virtues of what, in literary novels, are often counted faults. And he makes them moving.
—— Daily TelegraphSpring features Knausgaard unbound. . . the book’s blunt, unforced telling brings the larger project’s meaning into sudden, brilliant focus… Knausgaard has assembled this living encyclopedia for his daughter with a wild and desperate sort of love, as a way to forge her attachment to the world, to fasten her to it... Fall in love with the world, he enjoins, stay sensitive to it, stay in it.
—— The New York TimesHeavy but not heavy-handed, this true noir of the North is dark, bleak and moody. This story about life that’s set over the course of single day will move and disturb in equal measure.
—— MonocleAn unexpected treat… A lovely piece of work.
—— Sunday TelegraphOodles of musing on life and art that’s by turns meandering and electrifying.
—— Metro[Karl Ove Knausgaard] observes a subject so closely, mining so far into its essence – its quiddity – that the observations transcend banality and become compelling.
—— Peter Murphy , Irish TimesFor anyone who is curious about this writer... Spring makes for an excellent introduction. It is the shortest book he has ever written, but it is all muscle, a generous slice of a thoughtful, ruminative life.
—— The Washington PostIf you still haven’t tried Knausgaard... try Spring. It’s poignant and beautiful… you’ll get him and get why some of us have gone crazy for him.
—— Los Angeles Review of BooksA radical, thrilling departure from the first two volumes of his Seasons Quartet... this moving novel stylistically resembles his acclaimed My Struggle series... A remarkably honest take on the strange linkages between love, loss, laughter, and self-destruction, a perfect distillation of Knausgaard’s unique gifts.
—— Publishers WeeklyKnausgaard’s assets are on full display, including his precise writing style and his unerring sense of detail … it is all muscle, a generous slice of thoughtful, ruminative life.
—— Rodney Welch , Washington PostThe curiously loose weave of Knausgaard’s prose allows it to return parts of the reader’s own life to them
—— Rivka Galchen , London Review of BooksGripping... With grace and a dose of forgiveness, Goldsworthy performs a heartbreaking but exhilarating evisceration of the myths by which we live now
—— Nancy K. MillerGoldsworthy's crisply observed and entertaining novel has serious overtones and poses uncomfortable questions, not least about the supposed superiority of the West
—— Suzi Feay , Tablet, *Novel of the Week*A love story that begins in the East and moves to the West. It serves as a timely reminder that the European states once dominated by Soviet ideology were a patchwork of cultures with their own individual histories
—— Fiona Hughes , Radio Times[A] well-observed, witty novel
—— The Times, *Summer Reads of 2022*It would be possible to read library stacks' worth of books about what life on the eastern side of the curtain was like, trying to understand the feeling of the late Soviet Union... Or you could read this book
—— Jasper Lindell , Canberra TimesBeautifully crafted... Goldsworthy's evocative descriptions of both worlds - the rigid ice of the east and the damp monotony of the west - lend a filmic quality to this layered novel
—— New HumanistGoldsworthy's perceptive and well-crafted story plays like The Americans as revised by Sally Rooney, with acidic observations worthy of the late Kingsley Amis. By flipping the Cold War script, Goldsworthy comes up with a winner.
—— Publishers WeeklyWitty, poignant and full of surprises - every detail of this cross-cultural story of love and disillusionment rings true.
—— Clare ChambersAn unflinching brilliant novel about the mental divide between East and West in Europe in the Cold War era.
—— Tom de Waal , Carnegie Europe Summer ReadsPicks up the mantel of writers like Margaret Atwood and Kazuo Ishiguro . . . but it also stands on its own as a remarkable, propulsive novel. At a moment when state control over women's bodies (and autonomy) seems ever more chilling, the book feels horrifyingly unbelievable and eerily prescient all at once
—— Vogue, The Best Books of 2022[An] enthralling speculative debut . . . A powerful story, made more so by its empathetic and complicated heroine
—— Kirkus Starred ReviewEnthralling....a powerful story, made more so by its empathetic and complicated heroine
—— Publishers WeeklyA gripping, witty and ultimately redemptive vision of dystopian motherhood
—— Leah Hazard, author of HARD PUSHEDThis scarily prescient novel that's reminiscent of Orwell and Vonnegut explores the depths of parents' love, how strictly we judge mothers and each other and the terrifying potential of government overreach
—— Good Housekeeping (US)(An) infuriatingly timely debut novel... that may read more like a preview than a dystopia, depending on your faith in the future of Roe v. Wade
—— New York TimesNo book has ever made me cry this much. The School for Good Mothers is an absolute masterpiece
—— Rosie Walker, author of Secrets of a Serial KillerA powerful story
—— SFXChan's high-concept novel may toy with dystopia but it remains chillingly plausible, a portrait of our fanatical culture of judgement against women, and mothers in particular, taken to a grotesquely logical extreme
—— MetroA nail-biting explosive story exploring the pressures of 'perfect' parenting
—— Woman's Own MagazineThe writing is at times hilarious and scalpel sharp
—— Independent (Ireland)Part science fiction, part incarceration narrative and part Cultural Revolution memoir, it is as gripping as it is terrifying - and for mothers struggling to 'do the right thing', all too believable
—— Spiked OnlinePropulsive and provocative
—— Daily ExpressThe School For Good Mothers is a perceptive, prescient and daring debut that presents a dystopia that doesn't feel as far away as we'd like it to
—— CultureflyAn unforgettable an haunting story about the thoughts, opinions and choices you make
—— Woman's WeeklyReminiscent of The Handmaid's Tale, this eerie page-turner is a captivating depiction of a dystopian world that feels entirely possible. It's not only the gripping story of Frida's personal struggle, but also a thought-provoking work of commentary on American motherhood
—— TIMEI was fascinated and intrigued by this feminist dystopian novel
—— Daily MailSo brilliant and haunting and ahead of its time... the only book that has ever stopped me from sleeping
—— Jessie CaveAn absolutely gripping debut.
—— Frances Cha, author of IF I HAD YOUR FACESwitch the phone to silent, banish all distractions: it's time for a book binge
—— Saga MagazineFabulous. I loved becoming reacquainted with the Walsh family
—— My Weekly Special SeriesA masterclass in creating the perfect follow-up story . . . This sequel shone
—— Jane Harper , Daily ExpressIncluded in 'Best Paperbacks of April 2023'
—— THE TIMESThere aren't many books that come along . . . where on one page you can be laughing hysterically, and then you turn the page and you're nearly in tears for the opposite reason. This is that book. Beautifully told. Loads of warmth, loads of humour.
—— Phil Williams , Times RadioShe is a genius stylist. Her characters are so vivid, her situations feel so real and authentic. This is my favourite book of hers.
—— Hannah Beckerman , Times RadioAmazing
—— Beth O'LearyEnticing
—— StylistThere's light and dark in all Keyes' novels, equal measures of hilarity and heartbreak
—— ScotsmanHard to put down
—— Sunday ExpressLovable, funny. Doesn't disappoint
—— Sunday LifeKeyes at the peak of her powers
—— ScotsmanPraise for Marian Keyes
—— :Messy, tangled complex humans who reminded me that few of us ever really sort out our lives at all
—— Jojo MoyesA novel that is warm and witty but never afraid to tackle the big stuff
—— Elizabeth Day , Mail on SundayMagnificently messy lives, brilliantly untangled. Funny, tender and completely absorbing!
—— Graham NortonKeyes knows how to make serious issues relatable - and get a few grownup laughs, too
—— GuardianThere should be a word to describe the sadness and satisfaction you feel when you read the last page of a Marian Keyes novel: the ending is perfect but you still want more, more, more
—— Liane MoriartyCharming, funny and poignant. But also profound, heartbreaking
—— Nina StibbeKeyes at her best: capturing everyday voices with humour and empathy with writing that you'll devour in a weekend. Just pure and simple joy
—— StylistFunny, thought-provoking and will get you right in the feels
—— RedSensitive, funny, wonderful, immensely touching
—— Nigella LawsonMarian Keyes's gift for storytelling is utterly magnificent
—— Liz NugentRachel Walsh is back with a bang. Wickedly shrewd and fun
—— RTE Guide, 'Top 10 Fiction of 2022'






