Author:James Patterson

Jane was a sweet, funny, chubby seven-year-old, desperately seeking love from her self-obsessed mother, Vivienne, and a father who was wrapped up in a new life with his beautiful young girlfriend. Jane's only friend was handsome, funny, thirty-something Michael. Michael was different; no one else could see him, nor did they believe he existed beyond the realms of Jane's very creative imagination. They would talk from morning until night. As Jane grew older though, the time came for Michael to leave Jane's side.
Jane couldn't forget him though. Over twenty years since Michael said goodbye, Jane catches a glimpse of that unforgotten face, her heart pounding, she can't believe it is true - could it really be Michael? This time though Michael isn't just a figment of her imagination. But will the path of true love be a smooth one? And will Jane get her happy ever after?
Sundays at Tiffany's is a heart-warming romance about a girl who until now has lived her life on the sidelines, about what it feels like to fall in love, a tale of soulmates.
A very bleak picture indeed, and very well told'
—— William Leith , ObserverTautly constructed, graphic, angry, powerful fiction
—— Catherine Taylor , The GuardianA powerful account of life among the dispossessed in contemporary east London
—— The London PaperBeautifully written first novel
—— The TimesAkinti shows us he is a competent craftsman
—— Trevor Lewis , Sunday TimesWritten in a clipped, street smart prose, Forest Gate is an assured debut... it is a study in cultural uprootedness and displacement, memorably documented by Akinti
—— Ian Thomson , Times Literary SupplementA short but densely textured read...James's gradual, fragile redemption...is very well conveyed. Peter Akinti is also good at conveying a sense of place
—— Brandon Robshaw , Independent on SundayI loved this book
—— Anne RobinsonA moving and compelling story ... authentic and impressive
—— Nicholas ColeridgeTo dive into a Wodehouse novel is to swim in some of the most elegantly turned phrases in the English language.
—— Ben SchottOgawa is original, elegant, very disturbing. I admire any writer who dares to work on this uneasy territory - we're on the edge of the unspeakable. The stories seem to penetrate right to the heart of the world, and find it a cold and eerie place. Her spare technique is very skilled. Every word is put to work. She sets up a small vibration, a disturbance, which begins quietly and generates wider and wider ripples of unease. There are no narrative tricks, but the stories generate a surprising amount of tension. You feel as if you've touched an icy hand
—— Hilary Mantel, author of Beyond BlackOgawa's tales possess a gnawing, erotic edge
—— Publishers WeeklyYoko Ogawa is able to give expression to the most subtle workings of human psychology in prose that is gentle yet penetrating.
—— Kenzaburo Oe, Nobel Prize Winning author of A Personal MatterEach well narrated and haunting novella, about love, obsession and dark humour, has an unpredictable twist of viciousness coupled with compassion
—— The Hindu






