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The Forest of Wool and Steel
The Forest of Wool and Steel
Aug 2, 2025 9:20 PM

Author:Natsu Miyashita,Philip Gabriel,Philip Gabriel

The Forest of Wool and Steel

OVER ONE MILLION COPIES SOLD

''A mesmerising reading experience for all of us seeking a meaningful life' JAPAN TIMES

What he experienced that day wasn’t life-changing . . . It was life-making.

Tomura is startled by the hypnotic sound of a piano being tuned in his school. It seeps into his soul and transports him to the forests, dark and gleaming, that surround his beloved mountain village. From that moment, he is determined to discover more.

Under the tutelage of three master piano-tuners – one humble, one jovial, one ill-tempered – Tomura embarks on his training, never straying too far from a single, unfathomable question: do I have what it takes?

Set in small-town Japan, this warm and mystical story is for the lucky few who have found their calling – and for the rest of us who are still searching. It shows that the road to finding one’s purpose is a winding path, often filled with treacherous doubts and, for those who persevere, astonishing moments of revelation.

Mega-bestselling winner of the Japan Booksellers Award, selected by bookshop staff as the book they most wanted to hand-sell: A tender and uplifting novel for fans of A WHOLE LIFE by Robert Seethaler.

[Contains 5 exquisite hand-drawn illustrations]

Reviews

Warm but also unsettling and exhilarating. That's some feat, but Geraldine Quigley has managed to make it seem easy

—— Roddy Doyle

A clever, compassionate and humorous look at teenage kicks and sectarian strife in early 80s Northern Ireland

—— Guardian

A sensitive and powerful coming-of-age novel

—— Observer

Worth checking out for its loving attention to how it feels to be young and in love in a time of turmoil

—— i newspaper's Best New Books for 2019

A poignant and powerful coming-of-age story

—— Sunday Mirror

A vivid debut. Geraldine's depiction of what could draw ordinary kids into a paramilitary organisation feels utterly convincing . . . her dialogue feels sparky and alive

—— Sunday Times

A classic coming of age tale . . . pitch perfect

—— Daily Telegraph

A beguiling, confident debut

—— Irish Independent

Both funny and moving, Music Love Drugs War is a poignant coming-of-age novel ... pitches tender depictions of friendship and love against the stark backdrop of war, hunger strikes, rioting and plastic bullets

—— Belfast Telegraph

If you happened to like Derry Girls, you're in for a treat with Music Love Drugs War

—— Sunday Business Post magazine

In this subtle and delicate novel, Gill Hornby has created a clever, warm hearted character in Cassandra, Jane Austen’s sister.

—— WOMAN & HOME

Miss Austen is both complicit in and a sly comment on our obsession with the novelist’s life and contested mental state, and it burns, too, with sympathy for the women forced to carve out different sorts of lives at a time when marriage was considered the only index of their worth.

—— METRO

Jane Austen’s sister Cassandra takes centre stage in this engrossing novel that portrays what 19th Century life was like for an unmarried woman of limited means.

—— GOOD HOUSEKEEPING

Gill Hornby ingeniously imagines what Cassandra Austen's own life might have been like, both before and after Jane’s untimely death, casting a different light on the familiar biographical picture without in any way distorting it.

—— DEIRDRE LE FAYE, editor of JANE AUSTEN'S LETTERS

Miss Austen is affecting, thought-provoking, and makes you think about both the Jane and Cassandra Austen in a new light.

—— HELENA KELLY, author of JANE AUSTEN, THE SECRET RADICAL

A charming novel… capturing the spirit of the brilliant sardonic Jane, and reminding the reader of how brutal life was for women in Austen’s era, it’s an ingenious and affecting embroidery on the fact of the author’s life.

—— Sunday Mirror

A pitch perfect novel, fond and atmospheric. It reads as if Gill Hornby was born to write Cassandra’s story, and she brings her whole witty and sympathetic self to the task.

—— KIRSTY WARK

Utterly absorbing. The lives of the Austen sisters are recreated with a brilliant sureness of touch that can only be achieved by deep study of the period.

—— ARTEMIS COOPER

Gill Hornby weaves a magnificent work of the imagination, a pastiche of Regency style and manners, fabricating a solution to a problem that has long mystified scholar . . . Hornby’s portrayals of Cassandra and Jane are tantalising . . . All devotees of Austen’s novels will want to join Hornby, and Cassandra, in this enjoyable act of piety to Jane.

—— THE SPECTATOR

Austen aficionados have looked askance at Cassandra’s wilful destruction of her famous sibling’s letters, but here, in a tender and touching recreation of their relationship, the (imagined) correspondence is the key that unlocks the plot... Hornby deftly describes the psychological toll that such uncertainly took on Jane, and movingly celebrates the fortitude of Cassandra whose greatest love was her sister.

—— DAILY MAIL

A wonderfully original, emotionally complex novel that delves into why Cassandra burned a treasure trove of letters written by her sister, Jane Austen – an act of destruction that has troubled academics for centuries.

—— IRISH EXAMINER

A beguilingly persuasive book that no Austen fan will want to miss.

—— READERS DIGEST

A beautifully wrought drama that find Cassandra, now an elderly spinster, looking back on the life they shared. Utterly charming.

—— BEST

Fans will delight in this new novelby Gill Hornby, which ingeniouslyimagines what Jane’s sister Cassandra Austen’s own life might have been like.

—— VELVET MAGAZINE

This complex story reveals a clever and warm-hearted character in Cassandra, and brings us closer to one of the greatest of all English writers.

—— WOMEN'S WEEKLY

A novel that will delight Pride and Prejudice fans.

—— i News

This is an engaging story about love, loss, and finding one's place in the world. A must-read for Jane Austen fans.

—— The Austenite (Instagram)

Through her spry, witty portrait of Jane Austen’s sister, Hornby mounts a lively defence of single women’s liberty.

—— Waterstones Weekly Newsletter

Fans of Pride and Prejudice and Emma will enjoy this touching story[…] In her meticulously researchedthird novel, Gill Hornby skilfully imagines the correspondence between the sisters.

—— SUNDAY EXPRESS

Hornby does amazingly well in the riskiest area of all, the invention of letters ostensibly written by Jane […] The television rights to this novel were sold at birth. No surprise: the dialogue is ready to roll […] People are going to love it, but I wonder if any screen adaptation will be able to convey the hidden treasure within this thoughtful story.

—— LITERARY REVIEW

‘It won’t surprise me if this is one of the books of the year, it’s a delight, one of those that you don’t want to end.’

—— RTE

Many of the themes familiar from Austen’s novels are deftly revisited by Hornby, and the letters that are reimagined are pitch-perfect, with deeply touching confidences shared in family correspondences. You can tell this book by its cover – it’s quite lovely.

—— IRISH TIMES

Beautiful novel[…] light hearted historical fiction which resembles Austen’s novels, a really lovely read very suitable for incoming spring

—— Excuse My Reading (Instagram)

Gill Hornby unfolds it all in her imagination.

—— The Times

Hornby combines a moving portrait of sisterly devotion with a comic depiction of the provincial life so brilliantly evoked in Austen's own novels

—— DAILY MAIL

[A]t the heart of it all there's a romantic twist..."Hornby is at her best describing the complex bonds between the excellent women of her story. She describes the horrors, but also the pleasures of spinsterhood"

—— THE TIMES

I've just started reading Anne Enright's Actress. I very much enjoyed her previous novel, The Green Road. This one has glorious lines even in the opening pages.

—— Tracey Thorn , i

I would definitely recommend Actress by Anne Enright, it is her at her very best.

—— Marjorie Brennan , Irish Examiner

Few reviews said how absolutely hilarious [Actress] is. Enright skewers beautifully those creepy provincial aesthetes of Dublin of the sixties and seventies.

—— Conor O'Callaghan , Irish Times

Enright is formidable in combining the concrete detail of lives – think of the extraordinary array of sibling portraits in her last novel, The Green Roadwith an acute understanding of the inchoate lives of families: the push and pull of loyalty; the projection of desires; the smothering of disappointment and unhappiness. Here she conjures [a] rollicking story.

—— Alex Clark , Oldie *Novel of the Month*

A rich, impressively imagined work about a stage and screen star who may never have existed but seems considerably more human than many real-life figures as seen through their own eyes or those of any but the finest biographers.

—— Philip Fisher , British Theatre Guide

This story is about mothers and daughters, but also secrets in families and women in Ireland. It's an easy read, with a quintessentially Irish tone... It's brilliant.

—— Jess Phillips , Observer

Anne Enright's brilliant novel is a darkly glittering account of the cost to both the mother and her daughter of Katherine's complicated fame.

—— Jane Shilling , Daily Mail

A gem from a former Booker winner.

—— Susie Mesure , i, *Summer Books of 2021*

Anne Enright['s]...writing is simply glorious. Comedy and tragedy in one.

—— Mary Lawson , Daily Mail, *Books of the Year*
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