Author:Andrea Barrett

Autumn, 1916. America is preparing to enter WWI, but at Tamarack State Hospital, the danger is barely felt. Here in the crisp, mountain air where wealthy tuberculosis patients recover in private cottages and charity patients, mostly European émigrés, fill the sanatorium, time stands still. Prisoners of routine and yearning for absent families, the inmates take solace in gossip, rumour and secret attachments.
One enterprising patient initiates a weekly discussion group, but his well-meaning efforts lead instead to tragedy and betrayal. The war comes home, bringing with it a surge of anti-immigrant prejudice and vigilante sentiment. Andrea Barrett pits power and privilege against unrest and thwarted desire in a spellbinding tale of individual lives in a nation on the verge of extraordinary change.
Andrea Barrett is in a class by herself. A near-perfect equipoise between smooth storytelling and the suggestion of larger truths
—— NewsdayFew writers have mastered the historical novel as [Barrett] has... Her re-creation of time and place remains glittering
—— The TimesThis is a meticulously researched novel, and provides an edifying glimpse into an odd, static world during a period when the world outside was anything but static
—— Daily TelegraphRichard Russo can write like Edith Wharton leavened with a touch of David Lodge
—— EconomistRusso's command of his story is unerring... He satisfies every expectation without lapsing into predictability, and the last section of the book explodes with surprises...One of the best novelists around
—— New York TimesAnother fine performance... This is a big novel with a full canvas of human passions. Russo, a humane and traditional teller of truths, sustains his story and his readers
—— Irish TimesRusso writes with a warm, vibrant humanity
—— Washington PostThe world of Empire Falls is at least distantly related to those of John Cheever's Wapshot novels... an unpretentious master of fictional technique whose deeper wisdom expresses itself in the distinctive fallibility, decency, humor, and grace of the indisputably, irresistibly real people he puts on the page
—— Boston GlobeRusso's inimitable blend of Eudora Welty, Anne Tyler and Booth Tarkington, removed to declining New England and graced with surprises all his own, makes for terrific reading, fast, funny and illuminating
—— Chicago TribuneA twisted paranoid version of our world... so even if the suspicion sometimes lingers that Palahniuk is like a hip uncle tring to impress the kids with his capacities fo taboo-breaking and imaginative riffs, he still presents something that we all yearn for
—— Financial TimesAs silly and brilliant as the others
—— Russell Smith , xyyz.caEver since Fight Club...Chuck Palahniuk has enjoyed a reputation as a down-dirty, cultish kind of writer with his finger on the pulse
—— Daily TelegraphThis is a book to read by the fireside, to be swept along in, to realise - with a start - that hours have gone by...In other words, to rediscover the lost-in-another-world joy of reading. And this book really IS a joy...my favourite book of the year so far
—— Eastern Daily PressA delicious, highly intelligent page-turner... With clever, confident plotting and meticulous period details, this is an engrossing and deeply satisfying read
—— Good book GuideAs you would expect from somebody steeped in Victorian fictional history, Taylor rarely puts a foot wrong...the colourful events which take place on the Downs should delight any racing enthusiast
—— Racing PostTaylor’s love and understanding of Victorian melodrama is put to good use in this tangibly detailed and deliciously written pastiche centred on an Epsom Derby swindle
—— Sunday TelegraphThis is a fictional world in which daughters are ready to bump off their fathers, husbands to exploit their wives, and everyone is happy to chance their assets on the wheel of fortune. It’s a novel that will keep you gripped until the very last furlong
—— Emma Hagestadt , IndependentIt is a detective story as gripping as the Victorian novels that inspired it, and is written with narrative flair and a terrific sense of fun
—— Robert Douglas-Fairhurst , Daily TelegraphDerby Day will be hard to put down... As ever with Taylor, literary complexities lurk under the smooth surface of a stylish page-turner
—— Conde Nast TravellerDe Witt has intelligence, wit and unusual stylistic bravery
—— GuardianAn ambitious, colossal debut novel
—— Publishers WeeklyDeWitt pushes enjoyably but firmly against (and sometimes beyond) the unknown capabilities of the reader
—— Harry Strawson , Times Literary Supplement






