Author:Michel Houellebecq

Artist Jed Martin emerges from a ten-year hiatus with good news. It has nothing to do with his broken boiler, the approach of another lamentably awkward Christmas dinner with his father or the memory of his doomed love affair with the beautiful Olga. It is that, for his new exhibition, he has secured the involvement of none other than celebrated novelist Michel Houellebecq.
The exhibition brings Jed new levels of global fame. But, his boiler is still broken, his ailing father flirts with oblivion and, worst of all, he is contacted by an inspector requiring his help in solving an unspeakable, atrocious and gruesome crime, involving none other than celebrated novelist Michel Houellebecq...
Shortlisted for the IMPAC Dublin Literary Award 2013.
A delicious exercise in satire and self-parody... His best ever
—— Daily TelegraphThe outlaw of French letters returns with an acerbic riff on art and celebrity... witty, wildly erudite
—— The TimesA dark master of invention... From the very first paragraph of this brilliant novel, the reader can be in no doubt that they're in the blisteringly bleak, darkly inventive grand massif that is Houellebeqc land
—— Evening StandardThis book, so beautifully written, so inspiriting for all its pessimism, is the new novel I have loved best this year. We have not his equal
—— David Sexton , SpectatorImpressive... Beguiling... He is a true original
—— ObserverElegiac... Compelling... A pleasure to read
—— Times Literary SupplementHave Michel Houellebecq and Martin Amis ever met? Despite a stylistic gulf…they might be spiritual cousins… In this Goncourt-winning novel, as amiably mischievous as the enfant terrible ever gets, his satirical burlesques of the Parisian art world and of tourist kitsch in La France Profonde comes closer to his cross-Channel twin than ever
—— Boyd Tonkin , Independent RadarA wry, clever, ruthlessly self-lacerating novel
—— David Evans , Independent on SundayJoyce's poignant tale of Harold and Queenie will stay with us for a long time to come.
—— StylistIf you loved The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry you'll be thrilled with this sequel.
—— Fabulous magazineA hot read
—— Good Housekeepinga lesson in gentle restraint
—— Sunday TimesMust read: a funny emotional story
—— marie claireGood though The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry is, this is better ....with an even more engaging central character, it will be a hard-hearted reader who can finish it without tears.
—— John Harding , Daily MailAn extraordinarily touching portrait - all dangers of sentimentality are banished by a final twist that makes you realise that what you've been reading is even sadder, and far tougher, than it seemed.
—— Readers DigestThe author of The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry hits a darker but no less compelling note ... However, the book is not without its own pleasurable uplift: a spiritual wind beneath its wings … perhaps it adds necessary ballast to the sparkling balloon of Harold's journey – and it will certainly find a grateful readership.
—— The Guardian[With] gently comic moments and [the] pitch-perfect black humour that Joyce writes so well ... It is not necessary to read Harold’s story before reading Queenie’s to enjoy this bittersweet novel which is a pleasure in its own right. However, reading both will only serve to double that pleasure.
—— The IndependentThis tender, funny tragic novel guides you to a point of emotion rarely found in modern fiction and the wonderful ending is truly uplifting.
—— Bel Mooney , Daily MailJoyce accomplishes the rare feat of endowing her continuing narrative with as much pathos and warmth, wisdom and poignancy as her debut. Harold was beloved by millions; Queenie will be, too.
—— BooklistA fantastic book about an extraordinary life.
—— Holzwickeder Nachrichten, GermanyOnce again Rachel Joyce writes so gripping and moving that you take the charaters to your heart immediately.
—— Buch aktuell, GermanyWith an enchanting, poetic language Rachel Joyce writes about the fundamental questions of life and death.
—— 52buecher, GermanyLike Harold Fry, Queenie is delightful and dark. Death, duty and regret shadow nearly every page, but the darkness is not unrelenting; there is humor, and there is light.
—— Minneapolis Star TribuneThis lovely book is full of joy. Much more than the story of a woman’s enduring love for an ordinary, flawed man, it’s an ode to messy, imperfect, glorious, unsung humanity ... Her love song is for us. Thank you, Rachel Joyce.
—— Washington Post[A] deeply affecting novel…Culminating in a shattering revelation, her tale is funny, sad, hopeful: She’s bound for death, but full of life.
—— People MagazineA moving, lyrical read about life, love and saying goodbye. this is a companion story to the similarly entrancing The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, but could be read alone.
—— Cathy Rentzenbrink , Prima