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The Half Moon
The Half Moon
Feb 16, 2026 10:19 AM

Author:Mary Beth Keane,Rebecca Lowman,Norbert Leo Butz

The Half Moon

Brought to you by Penguin.

There are two sides to every story - and every marriage in crisis . . .

Malcolm, bartender at the Half Moon, has always dreamed of owning a bar, and when his boss finally retires, he seizes his chance. He sees unquantifiable magic and potential in the Half Moon and hopes to make it a bigger success.

His wife, Jess, has devoted herself to her law career, but after years of trying for a baby, she's struggling to accept the idea that motherhood might not be in her future. She finds herself slipping away from both her career and her marriage. The bar is Malcolm's dream, and as she feels her youth start to fade, she wonders how to reshape her own life.

When a blizzard hits their upstate New York town on the same day that Malcolm learns some shocking news about Jess, and a regular at the bar goes missing, everyone is frozen in place for a single, pivotal week. In The Half Moon, award-winning author Mary Beth Keane carefully explores a marriage in crisis, what it takes to make a life with another person, and the true meaning of family.

One tumultuous week. One marriage in crisis. One chance to begin again...

'Mary Beth Keane writes to the heart of the human heart . . . I could not put this book down' MIRANDA COWLEY HELLER

'Prepare to lose yourself in this book' SARA COLLINS

'Allows us to look around our own lives with respect and kindness, and is therefore a great gift' ANN NAPOLITANO

©2023 Mary Beth Keane (P)2023 Penguin Audio

Reviews

Mary Beth Keane writes to the heart of the human heart. She shows us how love can deepen, how love can stall - hang in the sky like a half moon, waxing and waning in the same moment, equal parts shadow and light. I could not put this book down'

—— Miranda Cowley Heller, author of Sunday Times bestseller The Paper Palace

Absorbing ... Keane excels at moments of interior deliberation ... it's such a pleasure to sink into Keane's quietly luminous prose ... Her recordings of the small, significant moments of life have a way of standing for something larger... [Keane's] perceptive, generous observations and attention to her characters' inner lives make for a book that is much, much more than the sum of its characters. She manages to find the extraordinary grace in our achingly ordinary world

—— New York Times

I adored this compelling, touching, exquisitely crafted story about a marriage in crisis. As a devoted fan of Mary Beth Keane, I'm already looking forward to whatever she chooses to write next!

—— Liane Moriarty

I fell in love with The Half Moon from the first page, and barely looked up until I'd finished. Mary Beth Keane has written another brilliantly absorbing novel about complicated marriages and family dynamics - how they shape us, yes, but how they undo us as well. Prepare to lose yourself in this book

—— Sara Collins, bestselling author of The Confessions of Frannie Langton

Mary Beth Keane is one of our finest writers on the interior complexities of marriage and family. She shines a flashlight on the intricate clockwork of love and longing that runs inside us; and because of the thoughtfulness of that examination, beauty and possibility are visible. I ran my finger over sentences while reading, thinking: Yes, exactly. This kind of fiction recognizes us, and allows us to look around our own lives with respect and kindness, and is therefore a great gift

—— Ann Napolitano, author of New York Times bestseller Dear Edward

Keane writes in a sturdily realist vein-the vivid, domesticated world of Anne Tyler, of William Trevor, of Elizabeth Strout-but her insights into matters of the heart, longing and restlessness especially, have astonishing delicacy

—— Vogue US

A quietly marvellous story of dreams, disappointments and second chances, but, mostly, love

—— Charmaine Wilkerson, New York Times bestselling author of Black Cake

Keane explores the sacrifices of a marriage . . . The tension is undeniable and deeply compelling . . . with an unexpected twist, Keane's charming, tautly-paced, and introspective novel will delight

—— Booklist

Here, a full marriage story is compressed within the span of a single week as charming, gregarious bartender Malcolm and his conscientious lawyer wife Jess confront the longtime fissures in their union and the many dreams deferred

—— The Best in Upcoming Fiction, Entertainment Weekly

You'll root for both sides in this deftly written novel

—— Grazia

A man walks into a bar... at the start of this remarkable novel, and how does Mary Beth Keane do it? Because I walked right on in there after him, into this sublime, shaken snow globe of a story. A story that unpeels the human psyche with compassion and wisdom and extraordinary insight. She is hands down one of my favourite writers

—— Fran Littlewood, author of Amazing Grace Adams

I LOVED The Half Moon. She's an extraordinary writer who explores the complications of human relationships with so much perceptive brilliance. Every character in this wonderful book is so nuanced - I've thought about it often since finishing

—— Caroline Lea. author of Prize Women

Poignant

—— LA Times

Keane is an expert at writing about the complexities of marriage and family

—— Good Housekeeping

Another beautifully written book

—— Hello!

The Hollow Sea elegantly interweaves the stories of two women haunted by hope and loss. Eloquent and moving, with a touch of folklore, this is a beautiful, hopeful tale

—— Elizabeth Lee, author of Cunning Women

Heart-wrenching, haunting, and ultimately hopeful too. Extraordinary. Beautiful, thought-provoking and woven through with folklore and myth, an utterly absorbing read that will touch your heart. Magnificent. Unforgettable.

—— Liz Hyder, author of The Gifts

Fiercely original . . . a really powerful, provocative and original debut

—— Natasha Solomons, author of I, Mona Lisa

An exquisitely-crafted novel about heritage, folklore and the persistent roar of unfulfilled dreams. When I finished it, I felt like I'd emerged from the sea, dripping with salt and tangled in kelp. Dizzyingly brilliant

—— Lizzie Pook, author of Moonlight and the Pearler's Daughter

A Coast 'Book of the Month'

—— -

Incredibly atmospheric and multifaceted

—— Culturefly

McEwan, whose prose is always exquisite, is best known for Amsterdam, Atonement and Saturday. His Nutshell is a stunt, but a gorgeous one, studded with Joycean reflections on fathers, the wisdom of pop songs and reviews of placenta-filtered fine wine.

—— Mail Online

Perhaps you’ve got to read it to believe it? That’s certainly what I urge. I don’t think you’ll be disappointed.

—— Lucy Scholes , National

Nutshell features the novelist at his best, combining the unsettling morbidity of his early works with the wit and depth of his later publications… It is comforting to know too that McEwan, one of the great writers of his generation, part of the defining clique of his time, continues to carve his talents into jewels 40 years on.

—— Simon Leser , Culture Trip

[McEwan] spins this gripping yarn in his usual sublime prose, sprinkled with the blackest of comic relief… The only criticism one could level at this slender beauty is that it’s over all too soon.

—— UK Press Syndication

This, McEwan’s fourteenth novel, proves once again that he is a writer finely attuned to how the heart beats. He knows how to make his reader feel entertained, happy, and sad, all within twenty pages – an expert in the craft of the sad smile, so to speak… Be assured – you don’t have to be a fan of the play to read this novel; it is a pleasure in its own right.

—— Cornelius Dieckmann , Varsity

It has a great concept and a brilliant opening… I love the way the wisecracking narrator…picks up information about the world… It shows what can be done with the form, that there are still new ways to experiment.

—— Paul Morley , Metro

Possibly the most unusual crime book of the year. A witty and suspenseful story told from inside a mother's womb.

—— Lovereading

It's an intriguing set-up, and one that allows McEwan to do what he's good at. The crime is deftly charted, expertly paced. Much of the writing is lean and queasily vivid.

—— Orlando Bloom , Irish Independent

McEwan is even more brilliant when turning his pen to wry humour and satire… An intelligent social satire.

—— Juanita Coulson , Lady

A classic tale of murder and deceit.

—— Choice Magazine

[It’s] incredibly brave and only one of our greatest authors could pull it off. He does, with aplomb. The sheer command of language and confidence with prose is a tutorial for us lesser authors.

—— Jeffrey Archer , Daily Mail

This dark, clever tale is among the best of McEwan’s newer novels.

—— Laura Powell , Sunday Telegraph, Book of the Year

[Nutshell is] hilarious and compelling… [A] ripping, gripping yarn – narrative velcro.

—— Craig Raine , Spectator, Book of the Year

McEwan is on top form… Social satire that wears its learning lightly

—— Lady, Book of the Year

[A] brilliant novel… A tour de force in language and literary intrigue.

—— Brad Davies , i, Book of the Year

A book pulsing with hilarious and brainy brio… He simultaneously spoofs crime fiction and finds a novel mouthpiece for a mordantly entertaining and exhilaratingly intelligent commentary on the modern world.

—— Peter Kemp , Sunday Times, Book of the Year

A comic tale… It is a masterpiece.

—— Fiona Wilson , The Times, Book of the Year

[A] wonderful new novel.

—— Catherine Nixey , The Times

By turns, funny, shocking and compelling. But the writing is so clever and beautiful. I could read it again and again.

—— Nick Clegg , Mail on Sunday

The voice of its narrator, a foetus, is splendidly sardonic.

—— Quentin Letts , Daily Mail, Book of the Year

Not only does he pull it off, he does so triumphantly, in the cleverest book I’ve read this year. It’s smart, dark and at times very funny.

—— Jonathan Pugh , Daily Mail, Book of the Year

A saucy, claustrophobic and darkly funny story which is all rather peculiar. Compulsive reading.

—— Henry Deedes , Daily Mail, Book of the Year

I devoured Ian McEwan’s latest very funny spin on Hamlet.

—— Sarah Crossan , Irish Times, Book of the Year

An ingenious rewrite of Hamlet as a murder story in which a foetus is detective and possible victim.

—— Mark Lawson , Guardian, Book of the Year

This is McEwan at his most playfully provocative.

—— Irish Independent, Book of the Year

A clever conceit, elegantly wrought, economically constructed.

—— Tablet, Book of the Year

A bewitching ode to humanity’s beauty, longing and selfishness.

—— Irish Mail on Sunday, Book of the Year

A gripping piece of fiction.

—— Accounting Web UK, Book of the Year

I was hooked from the first page.

—— David Murphy , Irish Independent, Book of the Year

[A] smart, eloquent novel.

—— World of Cruising, Book of the Year

A enthralling read from one of the world’s master storytellers.

—— Helen Brown , Absolutely London

McEwan delights with lyrical prose that is fittingly poetic.

—— Ed Butterfield , The Boar

[A] work which both fascinates and disturbs through its unique perspective on a malicious death… Every sentence is a joy to behold, a gift to the reader of delicately considered prose, and thoughtful observations… Alongside its edgy and entertaining narration, and perhaps in part because of it, the novel manages to challenge all preconceptions of the crime genre, upending the whodunit into an extraordinary will-they-do-it… By nature, Nutshell is a novel which perplexes, entertains, and moves the reader in equal turn, all with McEwan’s startling attention to detail, and luxuriant prose style. Read it for its peculiar narrator, read it for the rapidly-changing and intense emotions, or read it just for the thrill of chase as the killing comes to fruition; whatever intrigues you about this novel, just make sure that you do read it – and feel the thrill for yourself.

—— Eli Holden , Oxford Student

Brilliantly realised… Any book so bound up in a conceit and in its own verbal fireworks at times runs the risk of being a bit clever-clever. But on the whole we accept in a suspension of disbelief the foetus’s pompous mastery of language and imagery and abandon ourselves to the sheer eloquent pleasure of this hilarious romp.

—— Liza Cox , Totally Dublin

Short, odd but pleasurable… Great fun, and very well written.

—— i

Rich in Shakespearean allusion, this is McEwan on dazzling form.

—— Mail on Sunday

Told from a perspective unlike any other, Nutshell is a classic tale of murder and deceit from one of the world’s master storytellers.

—— Silversurfers

Ian McEwan’s brilliance as a stylist and surprise plotter finds a fitting subject in Nutshell…, which is Hamlet as told from inside the womb. Up there with his best.

—— Melvyn Bragg , New Statesman

A gripping tale is told with breathtaking skill, turbocharged with rage against the madness and despair of our modern world.

—— Guto Harri , The Tablet

Nutshell is one of those books you sit down to read and don’t get up until you’ve finished. It is brilliantly executed and full of surprises; original, clever and witty. Simply a must-read

—— Kalwant Bhopal , Times Higher Education

A book I couldn’t put down… brilliantly clever

—— Nadav Kander , Observer
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