Author:John Niven

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'Hilarious' ADAM KAY
'Mind-blowingly brilliant' DAILY MAIL
'Highly entertaining' EVENING STANDARD
'Loved it' ROBERT WEBB
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Frank Brill, a retired small-town newspaper editor, has just been given a terminal diagnosis.
Rather than compile a bucket list of all the things he's ever wanted to do in his life, he instead has at the ready his 'fuck-it list'. Because Frank has had to endure more than his fair share of personal misfortune, not to mention having to live through two terms of a Trump presidency.
Armed with the names of all those who are to blame for the tragedies that have befallen him, it's time for revenge.
Gripping, terrifying and hilarious – John Niven is our Hunter S. Thompson.
Terrifying and brilliant and gripping and tragic and humane ... it becomes progressively more tense … This should be mandatory reading for every U.S. citizen … Such a well-written book, with such vivid efficient prose, a powerful political plea disguised as a revenge novel. It’s brilliant.
—— Marian KeyesLoved it. A ferocious revenge story which also manages to be sweetly uplifting. A book Donald Trump would call f*cking nasty.
—— Robert Webb[The F*ck-it List] took me by surprise – a thriller with humanity as well as tension.
—— Ian RankinOf course, of course, John Niven does it again. It is impossible to read him without laughing out loud one second, and feeling guiltily exhilarated the next. His perfectly observed writing has taken us to many dark places over the years, but this may be the darkest yet: an America of the very-near future, whose stifling horrors he conjours all-too-believably. Niven is a writer of wicked humour and outrageous charm – but he is a profoundly moral writer, too. And while this is a brilliantly observed revenge story, it’s also a terrifyingly unsettling satire of a world just around the corner. Its warnings will stay with me as long as its wit.
—— Marina HydeHilarious and horrifying in equal measure ... [A] compulsive revenge thriller ... Niven vividly portrays the terror of a world where children are encouraged to take guns to school and protesters get so badly beaten it’s a wonder they bother. Mind-blowingly brilliant.
—— Daily MailThis road trip through America of 2026, with Ivanka Trump now president, niftily combines a case study of one life wrecked by her father (who reverses legal abortion) with a satirical speculative survey of his legacy, for minimal gun control to a cowed media, migrant detention gulags to wars with Iran and North Korea. And, as fans of Niven’s music-biz novel Kill Your Friends will expect, his anger-powered prose is not short of bite and verve.
—— The Sunday TimesFull of angry energy.
—— The Times[T]he book is masterfully controlled and highly entertaining, with surprising elements of serious reflection on ageing, regret, and mortality. Think Elmore Leonard, only politicised
—— Evening StandardThe most excoriating, shocking thing I have ready about Trump’s America
—— Damian Barr , The ObserverJohn Niven’s latest acerbic novel offers a short, sharp dose of misery and hopelessness – a glimpse into a near-future America that will shock to the core […] It is a shocking book on so many levels, but most of all because it is scarily easy to imagine some of it playing out in reality.
—— Irish ExaminerI absolutely loved this book. I read it in two sittings, it would have been one but I started late at night and I couldn't keep my eyes open! […] I'm giving this book 5 out of 5 stars. The writing is just brilliant and makes me want to read everything else John Niven has written.
—— Blog LovinNobody does cutting satire quite like John Niven. For years he has been the spiky in-your-face voice of Britain's Generation-X
—— SunJust the right side of absurd, it's a compelling and bloody page-turner
—— TatlerJohn Niven's The F*ck it List has a similar setup to the film Falling Down, but with a dodgy president running a dodgier US at its core. It's sharp, funny and unlikely to see its author invited to many Republican golf tourneys.
—— Ian Rankin , GuardianAn utterly addictive revenge novel.
—— Daily MailAn utterly addictive revenge novel [...] The heartbreak and hilarity ratchet up simultaneously
—— Irish Daily Mail[Niven] writes with all the savage, righteous energy needed to carry us along with it.
There's a beauty and simplicity in her [Lawson's] stories set in small-town Canada
—— Nina Pottell , PrimaAnne Tyler is a big fan of this Canadian author and so am I
—— Good HousekeepingA lovely, gentle novel with edge, worthy of Anne Tyler
—— SagaLawson's writing is such that it appears effortless but, as all the strands come together to create a rich and satisfying tapestry, her genius for storytelling becomes apparent.
—— Irish IndependentCompletely absorbing... A Town Called Solace pleases at every level. It's a captivating tale suffused with wisdom and compassion
—— Brett Josef Grubisic , Toronto Star[In A Town Called Solace] doubts, difficulties and uncertainties of the human condition are examined carefully in a way that is both heartbreaking and joyful
—— Bridie Pritchard , UK Press SyndicationSubtle and darkly funny, this tender novel unspools the interconnected lives of her beautifully drawn characters, as they grapple with grief and loss, while steadfastly hoping for a change of happiness in the face of life's uncertainties
—— Eithne Farry , UK Press Syndication[Lawson] writes an unpretentious prose that zings with metaphorical vim and humour
—— Tablet, *Summer Reads of 2021*Exquisitely poignant
—— Liane Moriarty , Good Housekeeping[An] absorbing novel
—— Sunday Express, *Summer Reads of 2022*