Author:Martin Amis

WITH A NEW INTRODUCTION BY CLAIRE LOWDON
Charles Highway is every mother's worst nightmare.
Precociously intelligent, mercilessly manipulative and highly sexed, Charles devotes the last of his teenage years to bedding girls and evading the half-arsed overtures of his distant parents. That is, until, he meets the aloof, wildly unattainable, Rachel.
As Charles's twentieth birthday - and the Oxford entrance exams - loom, his plans for seducing Rachel will draw him into a private collection of obsessional notes and observations: the eponymous 'Rachel Papers'.
WINNER OF THE SOMERSET MAUGHAM AWARD
'Scurrilous, shameless and very funny' The Times Literary Supplement
'Amis has brought off the feat of satirizing his contemporaries while making them both funny and, in a bizarre way, moving' Peter Ackroyd
A post-war American masterpiece
—— Daily TelegraphThis is a wickedly splendid book
—— Frank KermodeIn time this will be seen as Roth's best novel
—— GuardianFor me, the book of the year - maybe the decade - is Sabbath's Theater...funny...moving, imaginative, deep... A masterpiece
—— Times Literary SupplementSabbath explodes some mad genie out of his bottle... Sabbath's Theater has more firestorming prose than any other novel I have read this year
—— ObserverA work of near-heroic vitality and cunning
—— Sunday TelegraphAbsolutely filthy book with one of the most unpleasantly priapic and desperate anti-heroes in modern literature. A delight
—— Nigel Lindsay , Daily ExpressThis is the first of Roth’s late masterworks, and the most powerful
—— Orlando Figes , The WeekAs with all the best stories, there is a timelessness to this book. One senses it will be read in ten or twenty years' time
—— IRISH TIMESBiting and cheering in exactly the right measure
—— JOJO MOYESThe TV cook bit hooked me right in and it did not disappoint. This book is Charming, witty and clever
—— NADIYA HUSSAINAn excellent debut . . . It's extraordinary to think that this impeccably crafted, lyrically phrased and muscular book is Crewe's first . . . a brilliant evocation of the radical politics of turn-of-the-century Britain
—— Michael Donkor, GuardianEmotionally vivid and erotically charged, The New Life brilliantly reveals a 'seething and boiling' world of 'loneliness and anger and lust,' as Crewe's complicated, compelling protagonists battle the restrictive mores of the day
—— Daily MailPowerful themes and lovingly polished prose . . . a fictional debut of rare quality and promise
—— Daily TelegraphIntense and precise . . . It is refreshing to find any contemporary novel, let alone a debut, which is first and foremost one of ideas
—— Financial Times[An] excellent new novel
—— Independent'[An] intricate and finely crafted debut novel . . . The New Life brims with intelligence and insight, impressed with all the texture (and fog) of fin de siècle London'
—— New York Times'Crewe distinguishes himself both as novelist and as historian . . . He has, more unusually, found a prose that can accommodate everything from the lofty to the romantic and the shamelessly sexy'
—— New YorkerUnflinchingly bold . . . Crewe's language is striking in its originality, his protagonists are colourful and passionate, and their principles are brilliantly drawn
—— i paperSexy, cerebral and moving
—— Mail on Sunday'Atmospheric . . . Extraordinary . . . Crewe's taut prose is shot through with descriptive vividness'
—— James Cahill , TLSExhilarating . . . An adroit novel of ethics
—— New Statesman'Lyrical, piercing . . . The New Life is a fine-cut gem, its sentences buffed to a gleam . . . [Crewe's book] brims with élan and feeling, an ode to eros and a lost world, and a warning about the dangers ahead'
—— Hamilton Cain, Washington Post'Crewe deserves applause for his vivid scene-setting . . . There's much to admire in this meticulously researched, boldly envisioned debut'
—— Prospect'Nothing less than remarkable . . . A beautiful, brave book that reminds us of the terrible human cost of bigotry; this is a novel against forgetting'
—— Michael Schaub, Boston Globe'Rich and engrossing . . . blending the graceful ambiguity of literary fiction with the deftness of a page-turner . . . A smart, sensual debut'
—— Kirkus (starred review)A few established novelists continue to write first-class literary fiction on LGBTQ themes... The debut novel by Tom Crewe...reveals a new talent in the field. It is underpinned by extensive research... [with] a great story at its heart.
—— Literary ReviewThe New Life drives with a satisfying pace and a pleasing sense of both conclusion and open endings... how impressive it is that Crewe has synthesised a coherent and compelling fiction from his elements
—— CriticSuperb . . . Remarkably sensuous and intimate
—— SpectatorCrewe demonstrates rare promise in this beautifully crafted story about two real-life pioneers who tried to make a case for homosexuality in Victorian Britain... Crewe brings this era pungently to life
—— Sunday Times[An] incredibly assured debut... A fresh take on the historical novel, with desire at its heart, written with a charged certainty that the personal is political
—— Guardian, *Summer Reads of 2023*A rich, panoramic novel stuffed with vivid characters, heartaches and hazards... [a] brilliant debut
—— Sunday Times, *Summer Reads of 2023*Crewe's beautiful novel is filled with nuance and forensic insight into love. Deftly recreating the atmosphere of 1890s London, The New Life is a tour de force of intelligent and empathetic fiction
—— UK Press SyndicationA debut of impressive skill... Crewe is a trained historian and it shows: the period detail is exquisite
—— Daily Telegraph, *Summer Reads of 2023*The novel is full of exquisitely drawn detail, right from the opening scene, making the moral and social dilemmas at the centre of the story dynamic and compelling
—— GQ[A] pitch-perfect debut novel
—— Spectator, *Books of the Year*Sometimes there comes along a debut novel that feels like an immediate classic. Tom Crewe’s The New Life is just such a book. It’s a beautifully crafted, seductive story about illicit desires in Victorian London
—— Sunday Times, *Sunday Times Book of the Year*