Author:James Patterson

SEQUEL TO NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER CRAZY HOUSE
Twin sisters Becca and Cassie barely escaped the Crazy House alive. Now they're trained, skilled fighters who fear nothing – not even the all-powerful United regime.
Together, the sisters hold the key to defeating the despotic government and freeing the people of the former United States. But to win this war, will the girls have to become the very thing they hate?
A wholly individual writer of considerable stature
—— Sunday TelegraphHer touch is deft, her perceptions keen, her ear for speech phenomenal. Her people are triumphantly alive
—— New York TimesMiss Tyler is a writer whose special gift is to convey the richness, strangeness and unpredictability of seemingly everyday lives...She is a wholly individual writer and one of considerable stature
—— Sunday TelegraphIt’s not possible for Powers to write an uninteresting book... If Powers were an American writer of the nineteenth century, which writer would he be? He’d probably be the Herman Melville of Moby-Dick. His picture is that big
—— Margaret Atwood , New York Review of BooksAn extraordinary and brilliant novel of ideas
—— Time OutTense and heartbreaking
—— Los Angeles TimesAn ingenious, ambitious, at times dizzily cerebral work... It soars and spins... The novel attains an aching, melancholy beauty
—— New York TimesA splendid intellectual adventure [and] a heartbreaking love story
—— Washington PostNothing less than brilliant
—— John UpdikeA perfect novel
—— Financial TimesIn Olive Kitteridge, Strout has created one of those rare characters...so vivid and humorous they seems to take on a life independent of the story framing them
—— GuardianElizabeth Strout is... one of the undisputed heavyweights of generous, clear-eyed domestic realism
—— Daily MailA special, precious book...full of hope and humanity
—— RedFunny, sad, tender and truthful, this is pure joy
—— StylistA terrific writer
—— Zadie SmithIf you want to see what the policies from Whitehall that keep the working classes struggling look like in human guise, when placed in an environment where their identities have to be negotiated daily, That Reminds Me is the viewfinder you need. It’s post-Thatcher reality in the inner city, clouded over by racism, infused with West African stoicism, narrated by a voice that has known something different. It’s life as a growing boy experiences it, with a powerless wonder; it’s messy and beautiful, fractured but eloquent. K’s story reminds us that our scars should not strip us of our dignity.
—— Nii ParkesIn weaving emotion into literary gold, truth has never been this painfully told, or this beautiful.
—— Courttia NewlandThe best poetry out since Warsan Shire.
—— Symeon BrownA fast-paces, dense, poetic, original and bewitching story by an important new writer. That Reminds Me will long be remembered by readers.
—— Alain MabanckouDeserves the same recognition that greeted Max Porter's similarly constructed fictionalised memoir Grief is the Thing With Feathers... uses its broken-up style to explore experiences that defy easy comprehension. There is nothing indulgent about this quietly observed account of a black man Owusu gives the name of K... There is a physicality to his writing, the impression of incoherent feelings being wrestled into shape, that lends his book heft. K's future is, in the end, ambiguous, but Owusu's surely gleams bright.
—— Claire Allfree , MetroA bold prose poem written in novella form, That Reminds Me is one of the most powerful pieces of writing to be published in 2019.
—— FoylesThe latest release from Stormzy's increasingly impressive #Merky imprint, this is a stylistically ambitious memoir of a precarious Tottenham upbringing. Owusu writes with a poet's gift for seemingly incidental observation in a potent story that's left deliberately, troublingly fragmented.
—— MetroA virtuosic debut by a raw new talent. An honest and timely evaluation of a black man's struggle to belong and later come to terms with failing mental health. Utterly convincing and deeply sad, Owusu's storytelling will bring readers to tears.
—— Scarlett Sangster , The Irish NewsDerek Owusu is not just a brilliant writer, he’s a deep thinker. Anything he does is relevant, and meaningful. It would be easy to say that he is mainly concerned with the condition of young black men, but in truth he speaks truth to all of us.
—— Benjamin ZephaniahA magnificent achievement.
—— Paul GilroyWritten with candour and verve, and full of moments of heart-stopping anguish and beauty.
—— Stephen Kelman






