Author:Jennie Fields

She is the darling of Parisian society. A famous author whose novels have captivated readers. He is a charming young journalist with nothing to lose.
While novelist Edith Wharton writes of grand love affairs, she has yet to experience her own. Her marriage is more platonic than passionate and her closest relationship is with her literary secretary, Anna Bahlmann.
Then Edith meets dashing Morton Fullerton, and her life is at last opened to the world of the sensual. But in giving in to the temptation of their illicit liaison, Edith could lose everything else she holds dear...
Beautiful ... an imaginative tour-de-force with the best-written naughty bits I have ever read.
—— Wendy Holden , Daily MailA fascinating insight into the life of my favourite novelist. Fields brings a secret side of Wharton to life, and shows us a woman whose elegant façade concealed a turbulent sensuality
—— Daisy GoodwinWith astonishing tenderness and immediacy, The Age of Desire portrays the interwoven lives of Edith Wharton and Anna Bahlmann, her governess, secretary, and close friend. By focusing on these two women from vastly different backgrounds, Jennie Fields miraculously illuminates an entire era….I was filled with regret that I’d finished reading so soon
—— Lauren Belfer, author of City of Light and A Fierce Radiance[Fields’] portrayal of Edith Wharton in love is imaginative and bold and offers a touching view of Wharton... Fields immerses us in Wharton’s household, her social milieu, and her most private self.
—— Irene Goldman-Price, editor of My Dear Governess: The Letters of Edith Wharton to Anna BahlmannThis is a heartbreaking, exquisitely told story. Fields’ imagining of the passions, desperation and divided loyalties of her subjects is mesmerizing. Highly recommended.
—— Historical Novel SocietyIn the vein of Loving Frank or The Paris Wife, Jennie Fields has created a page-turning period piece. Fields portrays a woman whose life was hardly innocence and mirth, but passionate, complex and more mysterious than one might ever imagine
—— Mary Morris, author of Nothing to Declare and RevengePerceptive… Deeply felt… Sheds welcome light on the little-known life of a famous woman
—— BooklistDelicate and imaginative. Fields’s love and respect for all her characters and her care in telling their stories shines through.
—— Publishers WeeklyFields supplements the story with fascinating excerpts from Wharton’s actual letters and includes appearances by other authors of the period . . . to re-create the exciting literary landscape of Paris and New York in the first decade of the 20th century. . . . the novel should . . . appeal to those who enjoyed Paula McLain’s The Paris Wife.
—— Library JournalInspired by Wharton’s letters, The Age of Desire is by turns sensuous . . . and sweetly melancholy. It’s also a moving examination of a friendship between two women.
—— BookpageOne doesn’t have to be an Edith Wharton fan to luxuriate in the Wharton-esque plotting and prose Fields so elegantly conjures.
—— KirkusA sensitive novel ... told through the innocent lens of four-year-old Jesika. It's a challenge to not become completely engrossed and concerned for her family's wellbeing.
—— Belfast Telegraph MorningAmanda Berriman's heart-wrenching tale of a family on the edge
—— Kerry Hudson , ObserverAlbert is a natural storyteller who writes with the confidence of an old hand
—— Daily TelegraphA bewitching, elegant blend of contemporary thriller and dark fantasy
—— ObserverSimultaneously enticing and fearsome, much like the Hazel Wood of the title ... insidiously beautiful
—— GuardianThis eerie debut YA novel puts such a terrifying twist on classic bedtime stories, you'll not sleep a wink.
—— Heat MagazineA story of curiosity and obsession, this is full of rich detail and is a book to get lost in
—— StylistA gloriously assured debut, set in a beautifully drawn London… A story of obsession and destruction, hope and heart, which beguiles as much as the mermaid herself.
—— Red Magazine, **Books of the Year**The most buzzed-about book of 2018 so far is also the most magical… the definition of ‘must-read’
—— Sunday Telegraph Stella MagazinesIt feels like 2018 has more than its share of debut novels to get excited about. The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock by Imogen Hermes Gowar nails the 18th century as convincingly as Francis Spufford in Golden Hill, but with supernatural elements that bring to mind Susannah Clarke and Sarah Perry.’
—— Alex Preston , Observer Best Fiction 2018A deliciously salty slab of historical fiction… The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock crests a new wave of historical fiction that brings the complex lives of historical women out of the shadows.
—— Daily TelegraphBig, big things are predicted for this debut. Set in 1785, merchant Jonah Hancock finds himself in possession of a mermaid (“More of a sea-goblin, aint it?”) and is invited by an ageing courtesan to pool their resources and turn it into a society showstopper which just happens to take place in her “high-society parlour” where he meets the wonderful Angelica. Rich in detail and utterly charming, it’s the natural successor to The Essex Serpent and The Miniaturist.
—— Emerald StreetAn epic and intricately researched historical novel evokes 1780s London – an era of spectacle, Soho courtesans, lavish parties and dark secrets.
—— Marta Bausells , ElleA wonderful romp through Georgian London.
—— IndependentA wonderful read
—— Nina StibbeBeautiful courtesans, destructive mermaids, mercenary madams, raucous sailors; there's little Imogen Hermes Gowar doesn't throw at her extraordinary debut novel. And thanks to her deft, skilfully weaved plot and gorgeous writing, it all comes together beautifully.
—— iBooks 2018 HotlistA fabulous new author... A wonderfully atmospheric historical novel which is vivid and rich enough in its depiction of 18th century London. Posing questions of social mobility, the status of women and the role of family, this is a debut novel in which you can get lost.
—— Ben East , The NationalAbsolutely delightful... I read it greedily, savouring the characters’ adventures and their wit, resilience and humanity as they contend with the glittering, filthy, dangerous city that was Georgian London. The novel is a well-researched, charming, immensely entertaining read
—— Maria McCannImmerse yourself in Georgian London... beautiful storytelling with a hint of magic.
—— Good HousekeepingI was captivated by this beautiful book until the last perfect sentence
—— Antonia Senior , The Times, **Books of the Year**Good god, it is a wonderful book
—— Louise O'NeillExquisitely written, flawlessly imagined, The Mermaid & Mrs Hancock's siren song - of courtesans and merchants, shipwrecks and wonders, love and grief, ambition and passion - will echo like the ocean in a seashell long after the last page is turned.
—— Katy Darby, author of The Whores' Asylum[A] gripping debut… independence, love, class, death and gender stereotypes — are skilfully explored here through a late 18th-century lens
—— Precious Adesina , Financial TimesBeautifully written, sinuous, enchanting, brilliantly researched, The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock goes deep into the eighteenth century - its grand front rooms, the secret places, the streets and the ocean that changed everything about Britain and it lays bare the hearts of a cast of unforgettable characters
—— Kate Williams, author of The Edge of the FallThis story really is spellbinding, an unforgettable jewel of a novel, filled to the brim with intelligence, heart and wit.
—— Vintage Life MagazineBeautifully written… By turns bawdy, witty and moving this is a glorious romp through Georgian London, in “the age of unlikely ascents”. With a truly gorgeous package á la The Essex Serpent, it deserves to be huge
—— Alice O'Keeffe , BooksellerDelightful… A gloriously immersive read, bringing Georgian London vividly to life… The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock impresses with Gowar’s attention to vivid and sensual detail
—— Alice O'Keeffe , BooksellerIts energy, characterisation and great sense of period completely seduced me.
—— Fanny Blake , Woman & HomeAn utterly absorbing read.
—— Jennifer McShane , ImageA gorgeously immersive novel.
—— Sarah Manning , RedStunning.
—— Louise Rhind-Tutt , iNewsIn 2018 [mermaids] are back in vogue.
—— ObserverA terrific debut
—— Press Association, Books to look out for 2018The Mermaid And Mrs Hancock is the rare book that actually lives up to its hype and I’d be surprised if it wasn’t this year’s The Essex Serpent. Lush, vivid descriptions of 1780s Soho, proto-feminism, sparkly dialogue and a pleasingly irreverent style, it’s historical fiction even for people who don’t like historical fiction.
—— Anna James , The PoolA tale of love, family and social status movingly told.
—— Sue Price , Saga MagazineAn absorbing tale of curiosity and obsession… Gowar’s prose is marvellous… There’s a beautiful balance of rhythm and intrigue, and an eye for what brings a book alive.
—— Galen O'Hanlon , The SkinnyThe most anticipated novel of the year.
—— Eastern Daily PressAn accomplished, captivating debut novel.
—— Charlotte Heathcote , Daily Express- The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock is a roistering, swaggering, bawdy novel… [a] confident and accomplished debut
—— The TimesLush, vivid descriptions of 1780s Soho, proto-feminism, sparkly dialogue and a pleasingly irreverent style.
—— Anna James , The PoolProse that’s as effervescent as it is intelligent.
—— Lucy Brooks , CultureWhisperGowar’s prose shimmers.
—— Benjamin Evans , The ObserverRich and humorous, it’s a heady period whirl with a magic realist twist.
—— Marianka Swain , Move to Town & CountryA highly impressing debut… An absorbing tale of sex, money, ambition and the lure of the new.
—— Nick Rennison , BBC History MagazineGowar’s wonderful novel expertly captures that sense of a more fluid society… An engrossing and well-paced novel, shot through with melancholy, yet filled with wonder and desire. The sort of book you lose yourself in for days.
—— Sarah Hughes , iImogen Hermes Gowar’s bawdy, picturesque romp through the heady miasma of Georgian London is easily one of the most wonderfully immersive, richly drawn books I’ve read in years… This piece of historical fiction is really something special… Some truly exquisite writing.
—— Lizzie Pook , StylistAll-consuming and spellbinding.
—— Time OutGowar's writing is energetic, and she has wonderful attention both to physical and emotional detail and to the circumstances that constrain lives
—— Optima MagazineThis glittering debut novel examines every rung of 18th-century London’s social ladder with keen wit and in delicious detail
—— People MagazineA Dazzling account of dreams and desire in Georgian London
—— Justine Jordan , Guardian, **Books of the Year**






