Author:Italo Calvino

'I can think of no finer writer to have beside me while Italy explodes, Britain burns, while the world ends' Salman Rushdie
From the age of twelve, the Baron Cosimo Piovasco di Rondo makes his home among ash, elm, magnolia, plum and almond, living up in the trees. He walks through paths made from the twisted branches of olive, makes his bed in a holly oak, bathes in a fountain constructed from poplar bark. An aerial library holds the books with which he educates himself in philosophy and mathematics. Suspended among the leaves, the Baron adventures with bandits and pirates, conducts a passionate love affair, and watches the Age of Enlightenment pass by beneath him.
'The most magically ingenious of the contemporary Italian novelists' The Times
Reading Calvino, you're constantly assailed by the notion that he is writing down what you have always known, except that you've never thought of it before.This is highly unnerving: fortunately you're usually too busy laughing to go mad... I can think of no finer writer to have beside me while Italy explodes, Britain burns, while the world ends
—— Salman RushdieBreathtakingly inventive
—— David MitchellThe most magically ingenious of the contemporary Italian novelists
—— The TimesCalvino is a wizard
—— New York Review of BooksBrimming with humanity and humour... brilliant handling of language.
—— Glasgow HeraldRussell Hoban is our Ur-novelist, a maverick voice that is like no other.
—— Sunday TelegraphNew Journalism given a new lease of life . . . And then there's the frank pleasure of her sentences . . . I'm glad to taste something this sharp, this smart.
—— Olivia Laing , ObserverShe's going to be one we turn to for our serious pleasures and for the insight and wisdom we'll be needing in hard times to come.
—— Robert StoneIf you want to ride in a famous motorcycle race, then hang out with Keith Richards in 1990s San Francisco and finally consider the work of Marguerite Duras - and who wouldn't? - all you have to do is pick up this wide-ranging book of journalism.
—— Bethanne Patrick , Washington PostRachel Kushner's wonderful new book The Hard Crowd is a personal favourite . . . It's an exhilarating, voracious collection.
—— Martin Colthorpe , Irish TimesRachel Kushner's dauntless essays [are] all propelled by a singular and ferocious curiosity.
—— Cornelia Channing , VultureKushner proves as shrewd and daring in her essays as she is in her fiction, and a reader gets the same sense of tagging along with an author who has slept rough, thought hard, and gotten into her car to drive out and witness an event with her own two eyes . . . [A] dazzling collection.
—— Christpher Bollen , InterviewThis vitalizing essay collection . . . illuminate[s Kushner's] adventurous life and why and how she developed the skills to write about it with such breath-catching clarity and polished rigor, the literary equivalent of the fine-tuned mechanics of the motorcycles and classic cars she treasures . . . leaving her passengers exultant and enlightened.
—— Donna Seaman , Booklist *Starred Review*Come for the sharp portraits of Jeff Koons and Denis Johnson, the blistering reportage from refugee camps and illegal motorcycle races, or the light-with-laughter-yet-heavy-with-yearning paeans to classic cars and the San Francisco indie scene of the 1980s; stay for the opportunity to witness the maturation of one of the most intelligent and distinctive literary sensibilities of our time.
—— Emily Firetog , LithubWith characteristic confidence and poise, Kushner unpicks highly charged issues.
—— Chiara Rimella , MonocleDecidedly erudite . . . The Hard Crowd shows a writer intent on tackling each object of scrutiny with an unsentimental eye, not seeking to come to conclusions, but to sit with the problems that may emerge.
—— Katie da Cunha Lewin , Financial TimesKushner can really write. Her prose has a poise and wariness and moral graininess that put you in mind of Robert Stone and Joan Didion. This wariness lurks beneath a sensibility that's on constant alert for crazy, sensual, often ravaged beauty.
—— Dwight Garner , New York TimesAward-winning novelist Kushner . . . who's also turned toward criminal-justice-reform activism, shifts modes with an essay collection that promises something for all who love her work. (Yes, there will be motorcycles).
—— Entertainment WeeklyThe Hard Crowd is a vibrant love letter to the people who have inspired her... [Kushner is] as bold and adventurous in her writing as she has been in her life.
—— Erica Wagner , Harper's BazaarA compelling collection... The Hard Crowd is a portal into the lived experience of one of America's finest contemporary writers.
—— Fred Kelly , TabletCollected over twenty years her [Kushner's] wry and vivid writing offer a fascinating insight into the themes and thinking that underpin her fiction.
—— A Little Bird, *Summer Reads of 2021*The Hard Crowd is not so much Kushner's own memoir as a group biography of recklessness... Who better to narrate the lives of wrecked souls than the one who kept her head, storing up details of the wreckage?... [Rachel Kushner is] a vessel for excitement - the voice of a brood of Californian kids, a kind of Joan Didion for our times.
—— Amber Husain , White ReviewKushner's first essay collection jostled through the colourful events and characters that have informed her fiction. It's quite the ride.
—— Mr Porter, *Summer Reads of 2021*Rachel Kushner's essays have a way of grabbing you by the neck and pulling you into places you'd never normally go... The Hard Crowd is a great book.
—— Steven Long , Crack MagazineRachel Kushner's dynamic, incisive and glamorous prose style gives perfect expression to her reportage, essays and criticism, and The Hard Crowd, her first non-fiction collection, is an exciting book... she writes from the inside out and gives us the true story, the real deal.
—— Kevin Barry , New Statesman, *Books of the Year*The Hard Crowd underlines Kushner's non-fiction work as personal and immersive, much in the style of Joan Didion, and reveals the author as an inveterate outsider who embraces adventure.
—— Max Liu , iNews, *Books of the Year*Brilliant ... An absolute mind hug
—— Niall BreslinFreyne's radar is precision-honed to find the madness within the mundane
—— Sunday IndependentMore moving that I ever expected and somehow funnier than I assumed
—— Emer McLysaght , Irish Times, Best Books of 2020Editor's Choice: A gorgeous story about friendship, adventure and the importance of taking risks.
—— Alice O'Keefe , BooksellerAUDIO BOOK OF THE WEEK
—— Christina Hardyment , The TimesA hilarious jaunt into the wilderness of women's friendship and the triumph of outrageous dreams.
—— Kirkus ReviewsMiss Benson's Beetle is an absolute joy - a wild, funny, and breathlessly exciting adventure story that's also a moving and beautifully drawn portrait of an improbable female friendship in a world still emerging from the trauma of two world wars. Joyce writes about Margery and Enid with such tenderness and compassion, such wisdom and humour, weaving an irresistible tale of frailty and strength, curiosity and courage, grief and hope.
—— Carys DaviesMargery Benson dreams of finding a mythical gold beetle in New Caledonia. So she and her irritating assistant set sail from London in 1950-and become kindred spirits during an adventure both zany and harrowing. It's a wildly original, life-affirming tale.
—— People (“Best New Books”), USAA book that will have you howling with laughter the one moment and wiping away tears the next - my favourite read in years. Don't miss it.
—— YOU magazine, South Africa