Author:James Wilde
Bridging the gap between 'Game of Thrones' and Bernard Cornwell comes the third and final chapter in James Wilde's epic adventure of betrayal, battle and bloodshed . . .
AD 375 - The Dark Age is drawing near . . .
As Rome's legions abandon their forts, chaos grows on the fringes of Britannia. In the far west, the shattered forces of the House of Pendragon huddle together in order to protect the royal heir – their one beacon of hope.
For Lucanus, their great war leader, is missing, presumed dead. And the people are abandoning them. For in this time of crisis, a challenger has arisen, a False King with an army swollen by a horde of bloody-thirsty barbarians desperate for vengeance.
One slim hope remains for Lucanus’ band of warrior-allies, the Grim Wolves. Guided by the druid, Myrrdin, they go in search of a great treasure – a vessel that is supposedly a gift from the gods. Success will mean a war unlike any other, a battle between two kings for a legacy that will echo down the centuries. And should they fail? Well, then all is lost . . .
This is the shattering conclusion to James Wilde’s rousing reimagining of the myth of King Arthur . . .
I was riveted . . . an excellent tale, one of the best re-imaginings of the iconic Arthur myth out there and, for me, James Wilde's best book to date. Highly recommended.
—— Robin Carter , PARMENION BOOKSThis book makes for a perfect escape to a simpler time
—— Living NorthWry observation and heartwarming humour in equal measure
—— Alan TitchmarshOverflowing with amusing anecdotes
—— Daily ExpressAmusing adventures at the North Yorkshire village school
—— ChoiceJack Sheffield's in a class of his own
—— York PressThis novel is an unflinching account of loss, but it is also a moving tribute to the ability of the human spirit to endure such tragedies
—— The TimesGyasi's novel is a thoughtful analysis of a pressing social problem
—— Mail on SundayAmong other things [Transcendent Kingdom] is a sharp reckoning with the tensions between race, science and religion...its scope is pared back, its register intimate - not many writers can switch style like this
—— Sunday Times CultureA powerful portrayal of love and faith that reminds us how our parents' actions can ripple through generations
—— Telegraph[A] mightily enjoyable novel
—— Daily MailPerhaps neither science nor religion alone could capture transcendence, but Gyasi has proved, once again, that a novel can
—— GuardianA book of blazing brilliance . . . A double helix of wisdom and rage twists through the quiet lines of this novel. Yaa Gyasi is one of the most enlightening novelists writing today
—— Washington PostA compelling look at a woman's struggle to move on from the devastating effects of her family falling apart in front of her eyes
—— StylistThe must-read book of the year so far
—— ElleA powerful, wholly unsentimental novel about family love, loss, belonging and belief that is more focused but just as daring as its predecessor, and to my mind even more successful
—— Wall Street JournalGyasi's second novel, Transcendent Kingdom, is a very different book, and, I think, a better one - contemporary, personal, acutely focused on a single family, and intensely felt
—— New YorkerExquisitely written with a lightness of touch despite its difficult themes; this novel is a triumph
—— RedRaw, powerful storytelling that tackles race, religion, addiction and grief in a thoughtful way
—— Good HousekeepingWith deft agility and undeniable artistry, Gyasi's latest is an eloquent examination of resilient survival
—— BooklistThe Ghanaian-American has become a firm literary favour...Transcendent Kingdom is sure to cement her spot further
—— StylistMeticulous, psychologically complex ... At once a vivid evocation of the immigrant experience and a sharp delineation of an individual's inner struggle, the novel brilliantly succeeds on both counts
Transcendent Kingdom is quiet in the way a wise soul will sit in the corner, clear their throat and when they speak, everyone listens...Transcendent Kingdom is a book always asking this question: how did we get here?
—— Bad Form ReviewThe range Gyasi displays in just two books is staggering
—— USA TodayRemarkable, a devastating account of America . . . explores horror without ever losing sight of humanity or hope
—— Sunday Times on 'Homegoing'A stirringly gifted writer. It's impossible not to admire the ambition and scope of Homegoing
—— New York TimesIf you want to know why the world is this way, try this book for starters
—— Naomi Alderman, author of The PowerI need a book like this to remember what is possible
—— Ta-Nehisi Coates on 'Homegoing'Beautifully written . . . a raw look at the personal destruction caused by the opioid crisis
—— ScotsmanA poignant story of family love, loss and ambition
—— Radio TimesYaa Gyasi's writing is shining even as the tangled traumas of the past come to the surface
—— Sainsbury's Magazine'Yaa's depiction of these illnesses; substance addiction and depression and the family's deep-rooted tangled traumas, is skilful . . . Transcendent Kingdom is a story of love, loss and redemption, and holds a mirror up to one version of the first-generation immigrant experience that will sadly seem familiar to many of us
—— Melan MagEvery one of her books makes you question the order of things... She is one of the greatest writers of the past century
—— Lorraine Candy , Sunday TimesMargaret Atwood has just done her own thing and now she is one of those authors who is helping to change the culture. I love her for her politics. When The Handmaid's Tale was published in 1985, it just seemed that that kind of theocracy and patriarchy she was depicting couldn't happen, the world was progressing, but look where we are
—— Jeanette Winterson , Sunday TimesA hopeful tale. It reassures us that we are right to fear our enemies and right to resist them, and that totalitarianism can be seen off... The heroines in The Testaments are marvellously resourceful... It is massively satisfying to find this kind of heightened reality in fiction
—— Natasha Walter , GuardianIngenuity has always delighted Atwood. Here she revels in it... The twists and turns of an extravagantly suspenseful final race for freedom are done with bravura relish
—— Peter Kemp , Sunday TimesThe Testaments take us to a subtly altered Gilead and, in many ways, a more hopeful one... a rallying cry for activism that argues for the connectedness of societies and their peoples... Atwood's task in returning to the world of her best-known work was a big one, but the result is a success
—— Alex Clark , GuardianAtwood's voice has become a rallying cry against climate change and threats to equality
—— TimeAtwood cracks open the claustrophobic world of Gilead and lets in some much-needed light and hope. Spare, tense and exciting
—— PsychologiesIt’s a very different novel from The Handmaid’s Tale, charged with the optimism of change rather than drenched in nightmarish sweat... terrific
—— Claire Allfree , MetroTaut and gratifying… At the heart of the novel is a consideration of the power of narrative itself – of who gets to speak and listen, of the ability for information to limit, control or expand a person’s world… ultimately the truth retains the power to destroy
—— Donna Lu , New ScientistIt delivers superbly. The Testaments is, first and foremost, a manual of resistance . . . providing its readers first with a road map and secondly with hope
—— Sarah Crown , Literary ReviewGripping and full of incident, a deft balance of horror and wit… As ever, Atwood cuts to the truth about women and power
—— Johanna Thomas-Corr , Evening Standard, *Book of the Week*The oppressed feminist shriek of the first novel gets its more optimistic echo in The Testaments...has the dramatic thrust and power to scorch the memory
—— Serena Davies , Daily TelegraphIt is a measure of Atwood's virtuosity as a writer... that rather than picking up where she left off in 1985 when The Handmaid's Tale was published, she has written such a perfect companion piece
—— Mary Carr , Mail on Sunday IrelandLike all good dystopian writers, she presents us with a cracked mirror in which we are asked
to see distorted images of ourselves
If The Handmaid's Tale is disturbing, The Testaments is, in many ways, even more so. Less violent, sure, but Gilead isn't fresh and new at this point. It is a society that has existed for well over a decade, and as such it has become normality for all those who live there...this is, perhaps, far more frightening than the punishments and cruelty we see in the original text
—— Ann Dowd , StylistAfter Donald Trump's election, Ms Atwood came to be seen by some as a soothsayer... If The Handmaid's Tale was a warning, The Testaments has a more positive message... Ms Atwood says that it reflects a sense of hopefulness on her part
—— The EconomistFor those waiting to find out what happened next, The Testaments is a fantastic conclusion to the story
—— Sarah Bates , Socialist WorkerThe transgressive, deliciously dangerous mind of Margaret Atwood
—— EsquireCompelling, poignant and controlled, Atwood's latest work will have any reader gripped
—— Harper's BazaarThe Handmaid’s Tale and The Testaments can seem like dark tales for dark times. But Atwood argues that they are not. "Writing is always an act of hope,” she says, “because it assumes a reader. It assumes a reader in the future"... If what we need right now is a great big bundle of hope – and we do – I for one feel extremely reassured that Margaret Atwood is on hand to provide it.
—— Erica Wagner , New StatesmanBeautiful in its depth... It is in some ways the continuation and in some sense a response to the extraordinarily powerful world of Gilead she created in The Handmaid's Tale 30-odd years ago. There is a need now to look at what complicity, resilience and resistance might look like
—— Peter Florence, Chair of Booker Judges , The TimesAtwood mania is entirely merited. Not only is there no greater living writer, "Peggy Nature" as friends refer to her eco-activism, is our beloved sage. Her novels have engaged with myth, identity, the sisterhood, and our apocalyptic ecological crisis. Yet nothing has taken flight like her patriarchal dystopia, and nowhere more so than among women
—— Hannah Betts , Daily TelegraphShe's always before her time. Each novel is about something people become incredibly interested in half an hour later... There is this tradition of women's writing that uses irony and lightness of touch to deliver monstrous concepts and beliefs. It's that ironic voice that has helped her seamlessly move from one generation of reader to the next. That is the test of a great writer
—— Carmen Callil , ObserverA savage and beautiful novel, and it speaks to us today, all around the world, with particular conviction and power
—— Peter Florence, Booker Prize judge , GuardianThe Testaments has come at the right moment for her as well as us because she's now a real sage
—— Jeanette Winterson , ObserverA feast
—— Josie Long , GuardianA truly dazzling literary feat that – blessed be the fruit – entirely lives up to the hope and the hype… Atwood’s particular genius is pushing and pushing at sexist tropes until they reach their grotesque but ultimately logical conclusion
—— Ceri Radford , IndependentThe Testaments calls for thought and reflection… ideological commitment is not its only characteristic. It is also a thriller, with a fast-paced plot featuring many entangled concealments and dramatic confrontations… Atwood’s writing is at its incisive best... Atwood is not simply responding to our current anxieties… it is also her own testament, and a renewal of the warning of The Handmaid’s Tale
—— Dinah Birch , Times Literary SupplementThe Testaments is all the better for choosing other, quieter forms of resistance for women under Gilead’s rule… The sequel is able to buoy you as a reader in a way The Handmaid’s Tale had no interest in doing, but sit with it and it’s still slippery and at times satisfyingly unsatisfying. This is an intriguing book from a woman who knows she can do bleak any day of the week
—— Sophie Charara , WiredThe Testaments combines gripping entertainment with a complex sense of humanity
—— Sarah Ditum , LancetLydia's fascinating tale serves almost as a prequel, while the girls' stirring battle is peppered with pithy wit. Praise be
—— Deirdre O'Brien , Sunday MirrorAtwood has conjured a compelling sequel to The Handmaid’s Tale that is tautly plotted in spare, economical prose… In The Testaments, Atwood succeeds in regaining control of Gilead through words
—— Ruth Scurr , SpectatorTerrifying, rage-inducing and utterly gripping
—— Eastern Daily PressThe interaction between these three women is deftly drawn. The enemy never feels other than overwhelmingly malign, yet perversely human and fallible
—— Morag MacInnes , Tablet, *Novel of the Week*The Testaments cements Aunt Lydia as one of the most fascinatingly monstrous anti-heroes in fiction
—— Abigail Chandler , SciFiNow‘Reminds us of the vital connection between words and power and how important it is to validate women’s words in particular
—— Susan Watkins , Morning StarBut the biggest name, with the year’s biggest book, is Margaret Atwood: her Handmaid’s Tale sequel The Testaments
—— GuardianThe biggest publishing event of the year
—— Marta Bausells , ELLEFor my money, the single most exciting publishing event of the year
—— BooksellerOne of the most eagerly awaited books of the year
—— Daily ExpressOne of the year’s big novels will undoubtedly be Margaret Atwood’s sequel to The Handmaid’s Tale, The Testaments
—— The TimesIt will be one of the literary events of the year
—— VogueWe'll be poring over The Handmaid's Tale for the 100th time in readiness
—— Good HousekeepingThe hoopla around the launch of Margaret Atwood's The Testaments is more reminiscent of the unveiling of an iPhone or something Pokemon related than that of a mere book
—— Johanna Thomas-Corr , ObserverTuesday was not merely Tuesday but Testaments Day, and the Capital Testaments Town
—— Hannah Betts , Daily TelegraphLast week's release of Atwood's sequel, The Testaments, made the last Harry Potter launch look like a wet November afternoon...a truly dazzling literary feat that -- blessed be the fruit -- entirely lives up to the hope and the hype... Atwood's particular genius is pushing and pushing at sexist tropes until they reach their grotesque but ultimately logical conclusion
—— Ceri Radford , IndependentTaylor Swift would kill for this kind of drama... Now, to read it
—— Alice Jones , i paperSpoiler discretion and a ferocious non-disclosure agreement prevent any description of who, how, why and even where. So this: it’s terrifying and exhilarating
—— Judges of the Booker Prize , GuardianTerrifying and exhilarating
—— Peter Florence, Booker Prize judge , GuardianAtwood’s musings on power and the patterns of history [is] as incisive as ever
—— Justine Jordon , Guardian, *Books of the Year*Undeniably page-turning stuff
—— Robbie Millen and James Marriot , The Times, *Books of the Year*A publishing sensation
—— Woman & HomeThe perfect escapist pleasure
—— Hallie Rubenhold, winner of the Baillie Gifford Prize 2019 , GuardianPage-turning stuff
—— The TimesCanada's visionary
—— MonocleA delicious page-turner
—— New ScientistA gripping novel with a satisfying conclusion
—— Charlotte Heathcote , Daily MirrorThe Testamnets is a cracking sequel to Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale and a timely warning about the lengths to which a patriarchal culture will go to control female sexuality
—— Alison Flood , Sunday TelegraphA superb and suspenseful expose of misogyny and the moral ambiguity at the heart of a fanatical regime
—— Martin Chilton, Olivia Petter and Ceri Radford , Independent, *Books of the Decade*[A] rare combination of a rollicking thriller with major political nous told one of our greatest living writers. Essential
—— Den of Geek, *Books of the Year*An era-defining masterpiece
—— Waterstones.comThe Testaments… lived up to the hype
—— Anne Carter , Daily Express, *Books of the Year*Superbly written and masterfully constructs the regime of Gilead more than its predecessor was able to
—— Will Evans , ExeposeThe extraordinary Margaret Atwood... she's fabulous'
—— Hillary Clinton , Stylist[A] compelling story
—— Jane Shilling , Daily MailAtwood's sequel shines with all the acuity and brilliance of the original, whilst continuing the story with flair and modern insight
—— Alice Manning , NouseThere is no language I could use to express the emotion and beauty behind Margaret Atwood's words. Her work takes you on a journey of emotion - whether you are ready to fight, be kind, be vulnerable, stay strong or simply be, she takes you there
—— Elisabeth MossThrilling, a meditation on courage which asks us to consider what our own response might be were we forced to choose between meek complicity and rebellion at risk of death
—— Madeleine Davies, Church TimesShe's taken our times and made us wise to them
—— Ali SmithInspiring and deeply disturbing
—— Nicola Sturgeon