Author:Joe Dunthorne

From the wickedly funny author of Submarine comes a hilarious new tragicomedy - a screwball tale of millennial angst, pre-midlife crises and one man's valiant quest to come of age in his thirties.
'Blisteringly funny and brimming with caustic charm - a joyous diagnosis of our modern ills that made me laugh out loud even when it was breaking my heart' Paul Murray, author of Skippy Dies
Ray is not a bad guy. He mostly did not cheat on his heavily pregnant wife. He only sometimes despises every one of his friends. His career as a freelance tech journalist is dismal but he dreams of making a difference one day. But Ray is about to learn that his special talent is for making things worse.
Brace yourself for an encounter with the modern everyman. Enter the world of ironic misanthropy and semi-ironic underachievement, of competitively sensitive men, catastrophic open marriages, and lots of Internet righteousness. With lacerating wit and wry affection, Joe Dunthorne dissects the urban millennial psyche of a man too old to be an actual millennial.
'Every lost generation needs its memorial and now at last we have The Adulterants. It's very sad and very funny and written with an innocence that in fact is diabolical' Adam Thirlwell, author of Lurid and Cute
There is a chortle-inducing moment on almost every page... Dunthorne is not only one of contemporary fiction's funniest voices but also one of its most generous and perceptive
—— The Irish TimesDunthorne is a superbly economical writer... He is also properly funny. There are several snort-through-your-nose moments. But throughout, the novel's comedy is always balanced by insight and poignancy
—— ObserverThe Adulterants is thrust-the-book-at-the-person-next-to-you hilarious
—— New StatesmanJoe Dunthorne is one of our best young writers
—— MetroBristles with a deliciously sour, dyspeptic humour and is excellent at skewering the lifestyle habits of a liberal-minded middle-class
—— Daily MailPerfectly formed... a pin-sharp skewering of a certain type of modern urban thirtysomething male, trapped in a protracted adolescent state. It's one not to be missed
—— BooksellerThe Adulterants, from its punning title onwards, is brilliantly knowing about its knowingness. It knows the only way we'll tolerate a narrator as annoying as Ray is to punish him for the very virtues that make him a good narrator - nosiness and eloquence
—— GuardianA sharp satire of contemporary London and the modern urban male
—— TatlerBlisteringly funny and brimming with caustic charm - a joyous diagnosis of our modern ills that made me laugh out loud even when it was breaking my heart
—— Paul MurrayDark, beautifully wry, and side-splittingly excruciating, The Adulterants is a triumph of voice and vision
—— Tea ObrehtA tale of modern manhood, full of malaise, melancholy and wryly funny observations
—— S MagazineA richly illuminating comedy of disappointment, uproarious and mournful, that places Joe Dunthorne triumphantly in the tradition of Evelyn Waugh and (that other Swansea resident) Kingsley Amis. A deft, brilliant, surprising joyride
—— The Art DeskJoe Dunthorne's new book is a pleasure - I was very fortunate to get to read his book Submarine early and reading this one was equally thrilling. I owe him a great deal ( but refuse to repay him)
—— Richard AyoadeSmartly written, The Adulterants riffs on London's housing crisis, competitively sensitive men and social media with wry insight
—— Book RiotI absolutely loved Tessa Hadley's Late in the Day… There are few British writers who are more acute at a micro-level on the psychology of their characters and I was completely engrossed by this novel.
—— Andrew Holgate , Sunday Times *Books of the Year*I loved Tessa Hadley’s Late in the Day. Hadley brings the gifts of a still-life painter to her fiction yet manages to produce satisfying twists and turns to her storytelling.
—— Melissa Benn , New Statesman, *Books of the Year*Hadley’s fiction — both long and short — has, with a delicious, detached clarity, observed the shape of relationships: their unconventionality, their transgressions. She is a superb stylist, with none of the pretensions that have latterly been attached to such a term: dispassionate, yet voluptuous in her prose.
—— Catherine Taylor , Financial TimesWith masterly economy, the hallmark of her style… Hadley takes us back and forth in time, and her forensic dissection of friendship, marriage and grief is a mature work by a writer at the top of her game.
—— Vanessa Berridge , Daily ExpressGorgeous, utterly absorbing… More than many of her contemporaries, the British writer Tessa Hadley understands that life is full of moments when the past presses up against the present, and when the present transforms the past. Her brilliant new novel, Late in the Day, explores both with equal urgency.
—— Margot Livesey , Boston GlobeA great novel... Hadley's wit is Austenesque.
—— Caroline Moore , SpectatorMuch like Virginia Woolf in Mrs Dalloway, Hadley is excellent at capturing how the past presses upon each present moment… Her exploration of generational dynamics, between parents and their children, is engrossing… [a] real triumph.
—— Anita Sethi , iNewsIn her masterly seventh novel Tessa Hadley… is possibly most impressive as an analyst of small gestures and an inspired noticer of things… [Hadley’s descriptions] have a hallucinatory vividness and everything in the story seems placed and considered with enormous care, from the smallest detail… to the subtle emotional truths which form the basis of all Hadley’s fiction. With a single flourish, she can make us interested in even the most peripheral characters, and their lives beyond the book.
—— Claire Harman , Evening StandardLike [Tessa Hadley's] previous fiction, Late in the Day explores the seams and fault lines of private life with unsentimental clarity... Hadley tells her story in cool, unemphatic prose, eschewing rhetorical crescendos even at moments of crisis and instead conveying the intensity of her characters’ experience through striking metaphor.
—— Rohan Maitzen , Times Literary SupplementA fine-grained novel of friendship, loss and jealousy.
—— Sunday Times, *100 Great 21-Century Novels*As ever, [in Late in the Day] Hadley's psychological insight is remarkable. She is deeply interested in the minutiae of relationships and the way men and women interact... One of our finest living writers, and if you haven't read her yet then you really must.
—— Alice O'Keeffe , Bookseller *Book of the Month*For 16 years, [Hadley’s] fiction has turned a beady, amused eye on ordinary lives, illuminating them with quiet authority… virtually all her sentences are perfect… an acute and beautifully observed novel.
—— Reader's DigestHadley's writing is lyrical, perceptive and has great emotional heft. Go read [Late in the Day]!
—— Joanne Finney , Good Housekeeping *Book of the Month*Tessa Hadley's Late in the Day promises an intriguing study of the way members of a close-knit group of friends react to the sudden, unexpected loss of one of their number.
—— Allan Massie , Yorkshire PostHadley’s great strength is her wise, fine-grained observation of interpersonal relations… Hadley moves with ease between perspective and also back and forth in time.
—— Claire Lowdon , Sunday TimesTessa Hadley is easily one of my favourite authors writing today, and her new novel – Late in the Day... has been highly praised by everyone I know (and, crucially, trust) who's already got their hands on it.
—— Olivia Marks , VogueTessa Hadley is well-known for her inimitable portrayal of character and her latest effort, Late in the Day, is no disappointment... A smart exploration of human nature, desire, and friendship.
—— Vanity FairA penetrating observer of human behavior, [Hadley] has a gift for dialogue that bristles with what remains unsaid… vividly imagined… Hadley presents a masterly portrait.
—— Pamela Norris , Literary ReviewStrange, unsettling — eerily beautiful, discomfiting, stay-up-late-addictive, sometimes hair-raising... Always, it’s Hadley’s high-res magnification on the interplay of marital (and friendship, and parental) dynamics that supplies her work’s steady gold.
—— Joan Frank , San Francisco Chronicle[Hadley’s] prose is a form of civilised conversation... Late in the Day is a very good novel indeed… [Hadley] knows when to let silence speak, and she has the rare gift of writing dialogue which both rings true and hints at what had been left unsaid but is keenly and sometimes painfully felt.
—— Allan Massie , ScotsmanA clever, compassionate novel that sings to the possibility of renewal in late middle-age.
—— Claire Allfree , Daily Mail[A] splendid, perceptive book… Hadley has expertly examined the complications and intimacies of marriage and family in such novels as The Past, The Master Bedroom and Clever Girl. In Late in the Day she continues her persistent exploration of human frailty and resilience, moving easily between the present and the past to reveal the hard edges and silent compromises that shape all relationships.
—— Minneapolis Star TribuneHer prose has the penetrating quality of Henry James at his most accessible… and is alert, as Virginia Woolf and Elizabeth Bowen were, to how time sculpts, warps or casually destroys us... A quiet triumph.
—— Michael Upchurch , Seattle TimesLate in the Day is confident, brilliant, dark and interesting.
—— Iona McLaren , Daily TelegraphTessa Hadley’s brilliant new novel – an event that always sparks joy… [– is an] elegantly written, ironically witty book… [Hadley] is constantly being favourably compared to Virginia Woolf – as well as Jane Austen and Henry James.
—— Jackie McGlone , Herld ScotlandThis is not a novel filled with incident, its pleasures are perception, insight and the intense examination of emotions… A very grown-up read.
—— Eithne Farry , Sunday ExpressTessa Hadley’s compelling new novel, Late in the Day, is a subtle, delicate evocation of modern life… Hadley’s observation is pin-sharp: whether describing a contemporary student’s house, a late-night drive, or simply a quiet room with only the reading light turned on, there is a shapely intelligence at work… There is something of Iris Murdoch’s fierce attention to the physical here.
—— Philip Womack , IndependentTessa Hadley has become literary fiction’s chronicler-in-chief of the lives and loves of the English middle classes… Conveying their lifestyle with shrewd economy… Hadley relies on patient, persuasive observation to draw us into a satisfying family drama of hopes and regrets as viewed from the fag end of middle age.
—— Anthony Cummins , MetroTessa Hadley’s great success as a novelist lies in… examining her characters with an unusual degree of psychological subtlety. Her particular strength is to combine a deep excavation of human frailty with compassion for its effects.
—— Andrew Motion , GuardianClever and thoughtful… [Late in the Day] is wholly impressive.
—— Ella Walker , UK Press SyndicationHadley… [is] authoritative and powerful… a complex story structure juxtaposing present and past and featuring carefully timed revelations.
—— Michele Roberts , TabletThis is the perfect example of domestic fiction done well… Hadley's prose is measured, spare and utterly perceptive of the human condition.
—— Culture CallingExtraordinarily skilled and penetrating.
—— Philip Hensher , iThe language is poetic and beautifully crafted… [and it] is the measured intimacy of Hadley's language that allows her to capture in so few words, the whirring emotions that stir beyond the surface.
—— MancunionCrisp, considered prose.
—— Franklin Nelson , Cherwell NewspaperExquisitely written… A slow burn that’s as elegant as it is crushingly emotional.
—— Sunday Powell , Sunday TelegraphLate in the Day… [is] beautifully written with moments of real tenderness — I found it immensely enjoyable and thought-provoking.
—— Sharon White , Financial Times, *Summer Reads of 2019*A wonderfully involving, intelligent and subtle.
—— Sunday Times, *Summer Reads of 2019*One of the best literary offerings so far this year.
—— UK Press Syndication, *Summer Reads of 2019*A prime study of the modern condition.
—— Conrad Landin , Camden New JournalTessa Hadley is one of those rare authors who keep getting better and better… the writing is joyous, and the conclusion will set your heart singing.
—— Stephanie Cross , Daily Mail, *Books of the Year*Hadley’s prose is so elegant, her quiet observations on ageing, adultery, motherhood and art so penetrating, it is pure reading pleasure.
—— iUnflinching, intelligent and fascinating
Hadley’s elegant sentence-making is pure joy, combining scathing observation with careful compassion in a novel.
—— Claire Allfree , Metro, *Books of the Year*A stunning read by a masterly writer.
—— Emma Lee-Potter , Daily ExpressLate in the Day will delight fans of Tessa’s work and is an excellent introduction to her style for those unfamiliar with her novels. It’s a gentle yet impactful and deeply thought-provoking book that will leave you reflecting on your own choices and relationships – and makes a perfect beginning to a new year of reading.
—— Charlotte Griffiths , Cambridge EditionA brilliant, beautiful novel populated by multifaceted characters and lit by Hadley's insight and skill.
—— BN1Reflective, poignant and beautifully written, it reminds us that the constant in life is change.
—— Jane Shilling , Daily MailCompelling.
—— Eithne Farry , Daily Mirror[A] compelling novel… Hadley captures the way old feelings, longings and hidden secrets unravel tight-knit relationships.
—— Andreina Cordani and Eithne Farry , Daily Express






