Author:Eileen Favorite

Up in the dusty attic of Prairie Bluff Homestead, Anne-Marie keeps all of her beloved books locked safely away. For her treasured novels - and the tragic heroines who make them so irresistible - have a way of hitting too close to home. To the Homestead itself, actually...
This otherwise ordinary boarding house has become the favoured refuge of the great women of literature, who descend on Anne-Marie and her daughter Penny - at all hours, and in all manner of distress - as their storylines are unravelling. And the last thing Anne-Marie needs is an emotional Anna Karenina accidentally discovering she is bound to take her own life on the railway tracks.
The Homestead has played host to a heartbroken Emma Bovary, a distraught Scarlett O'Hara, a weeping Catherine Earnshaw - but this extraordinary literary education will teach Penny as much about herself, her mother and their destinies as it does about the heroines...
Funny and tender ... a chance to see Scarlett O'Hara and Emma Bovary off duty
—— Audrey NiffeneggerA fun take on the impact literature can have on our lives
—— Publisher's WeeklyWhat if the heroines of classic novels could step out of fiction into the real world for a brief sojourn?This clever, charming debut is a must-read for literature lovers
—— Booklist[A] beguiling literary debut ... to carry you away
—— Good HousekeepingCan be scoffed at one sitting … tasty!
—— CosmopolitanWonderfully nasty...Extraordinarily vicious, deeply cynical and thoroughly depraved, but it's also bed-wettingly funny... American Psycho meets Spinal Tap... except more evil, more shocking and much, much funnier
—— ScotsmanA rollicking tale of record company excess...Hysterical...Niven worked in the UK music industry for 10 years and his insider knowledge pays off...This is truly an account of a lost era, a brilliant description of the last decadent blow-out.
—— Independent on SundayJohn Niven's Kill Your Friends might just be the most exciting British novel since Trainspotting...Although the tone - a mixture of breathtakingly black-hearted cynicism, hyperbolically dark comedy and liberal sprinklings of violence - will invite comparisons with American Psycho and Bright Lights Big City, Niven brings a uniquely vibrant tone to the page with take-no-prisoners language that manages to be equal parts comic and shocking.
—— Word MagazineThe fickle music industry is ripe for satire and here former record-label man Niven creates a compelling and hilarious portrait.
—— ShortlistDark, twisted...and also laugh-out-loud funny
—— TNT MagazineAbsolutely riveting
—— Daily ExpressOne of the evilest, most vicious, despicable characters ever. I couldn't put it down.
—— James Dean Bradfield, The Manic Street PreachersAnyone working in or trying to get into the music industry should read this book. Niven grotesquely portrays the short term disposability of this world with a great eye for detail and a stockpile of hilarious insults. Throw in some murder and major brand obsession and you have an indie American Psycho.
—— James BrownKill Your Friends gladly hammers the final and needed nail into the coffin of self-serving and undignified spin that was "Cool Britannia". It exposes a world that seethes alongside us and in which we all collude but whose nasty little machinery is rarely glimpsed. The novel is furiously, filthily funny, and, I imagine, tragically true.
—— Niall GriffithsAn amazing piece of work - as powerful as it is ugly
—— Greil MarcusA piece of writing that will be admired by anyone who's interested in the era that made our own and those who read it are unlikely to forget its cool, Updikean temperament
—— Andrew O’HaganThe narrative drive is irresistible. Well done to Niven for a giving voice to the sleazy foot soldiers of rock and roll
—— Independent on SundayA fine novella - as evocative as it is moving
—— ObserverA moving book that succeeds not just in vividly evoking its time and place but in distilling one young man's clichéd and minor destiny into something approaching tragedy
—— New York TimesOften stunning, dark and densely imagined...one man's elegy for a bygone age
—— LA WeeklyThe funniest writer ever to put words to paper
—— Hugh LaurieThe greatest comic writer ever
—— Douglas AdamsP.G. Wodehouse wrote the best English comic novels of the century
—— Sebastian FaulksSublime comic genius
—— Ben EltonYou don't analyse such sunlit perfection, you just bask in its warmth and splendour
—— Stephen Fry






