Author:Sinéad Moriarty

'Heartfelt and deeply moving ... I couldn't put it down.' Susan Lewis
'Intriguing and thought provoking ... a great read.' Katie Fforde
'Gripping and thought-provoking - I was desperate to discover how it would pan out!' Paige Toon
'We ate this fabulous story up - 4 stars' Heat magazine
'Love, lies and longing - this has it all - 4 stars' Woman magazine
'Intriguing - a dramatic twist in the tale will keep you engrossed.' Candis
When Alice's husband Ben dies suddenly, her world falls apart. They shared twenty years and two daughters and life without him is unimaginable.
Having lost her parents while young, Alice understands her girls' pain. At fifteen, Jools is at that awkward age and only Ben could get through to her. And eleven-year-old Holly looks for the answer to everything in books but this time she's drawing a blank. Alice realizes that for their sakes she must summon up superhuman reserves of strength.
Somehow all three of them come through the dark days. In time, it's even possible for Alice to consider marrying again, with the girls' blessing. So when Ben turns up after three years, her world is again turned upside-down. The girls assume that their family can go back to the way they were. Alice is not so sure.
Once more Alice has to find the strength to be the mother her daughters need her to be. But this time what that means is far from clear ...
The Way We Were won the Irish Book Award for Popular Fiction in 2015
'Fans of Sinéad know they can expect honesty, humour and great story-telling' Hello
Elisa Albert’s brilliant new novel…It’s obscene, reckless, vicious, hilarious and above all real…it ought to be as essential as ‘The Red Badge of Courage.’…Albert has inherited the house Grace Paley built, with its narrow doorways just wide enough for wit and tragedy and blistering, exasperated love.
—— New York Times Book ReviewAlbert has given us a portrait of modern motherhood that will provide insight for some and provoke others. For others still, in its quieter moments, as it reaches for an honest way to talk about birth, it will be like that big old bell ringing in them, a reading process of recognition and reunion
—— Rozalind Dineen , GuardianA voluptuous, hilarious, scaldingly and exhilaratingly honest account of new motherhood, emotional exile, and the complex romance of female friendship. I'm a huge Elisa Albert fan, and in her latest she has perfected a tonal pivot that whips the reader from laughter to revelation in a sentence.
—— Karen RussellAfter Birth is a fast-talking, opinionated, moody, funny and slightly desperate account of the attempt to recover from having a baby. it is a romp through dangerous waters, in which passages of hilarity are shadowed by the dark nights of earliest motherhood, those months so tremulous with both new love and the despairing loss of one's identity - to read it is an absorbing, entertaining, and thought-provoking experience..
—— Lydia DavisA novel piercingly honest and funny, written from the heart, that takes us through a journey of physical trauma and psychological truth.
—— Xiaolu GuoAn entertaining take on the vicissitudes of female friendship
—— Carmela Ciuraru , New York TimesThis explosive, angry, hilarious novel is the most accurate description of having a baby that I have read
—— Kate Saunders , The TimesCaptures our time with bracing, propulsive energy and brilliant honesty...Albert creates a deeply resonant and empathetic reading experience...exhilarating...Albert is virtuosic in capturing and maintaining barely concealed fury.
—— Jessica Roake , Washington PostA deep, funny novel about the terrors and exhilarations of love in all its forms. Elisa Albert writes with startling clarity and furious wit about marriage, motherhood and friendship, illuminating these familiar landscapes with lightening flashes of illumination.
—— Jenny OffillBukowski wrote that he preferred people who scream when they burn, and nobody burns, or screams, like Elisa Albert - a fiercely intelligent, dark and funny woman unafraid of her own anger.
—— Shalom Auslandervisceral...the novel lands plenty of shocks through Albert's caustic presentation of the battleground of giving birth and society's patronisingly anti-feminist treatment of mothers
—— Sunday TimesA visceral, raw, no-holds-barred account of the assault on the self that is first-time motherhood, this had me wincing (and laughing) in recognition. It’s very, very funny
—— BooksellerOutrageous, funny and visceral
—— Viv Groskop , RedThis book takes your essay about 'likeable female characters', writes FUCK YOU on it in menstrual blood, then sets it on fire. Then sets YOU on fire! Then giggles, then makes s'mores over your smouldering corpse.
With After Birth, Elisa Albert has proven herself to be not only one of our most important novelists, but one of our most honest feminists. Darkly funny and impossibly wise, Albert creates a visceral sense of entrapment, a spot-on account of life as a woman. After Birth is dangerous, gripping, and essential - The Bell Jar of our time.
—— Diana SpechlerChallenging, humorous and – tentatively – uplifting, it goes far beyond the usual explorations of what it is to be a mother
—— New StatesmanAlbert has made a novel that approaches depression and maternal anxiety with candid honesty, transforming writing on motherhood forever
—— Aaron Calvin , AskMen UKA hilarious, honest, and eye-opening book, this is a must have for any new mum or mum-to-be
—— Mummy PagesFunny and heartfelt
—— i (The paper for today)Really good books have a way of transporting the reader to places they'd never normally go to, opening their eyes to experiences and isssues they wouldn't otherwise consider. Meera Syal does all this and more. A beautifully written novel about female friendship, surrogacy and the problems of late parenthood.
—— Eastern EyeRich, sensual, earthy and utterly unforced. I was transported.
—— MICHAEL ATTENBOROUGH, CBEAlive with malice and grace, this is a taut tale reminiscent of the nightmares of Patricia Highsmith
—— MrsD-DailyPrey and predators circle in lush southeast Asian settings that gleam with Osborne’s dazzling skill as a travel-writer
—— Peter Kemp , Sunday TimesIt shines with intrigue, with investigations into the nature of the non-rational, and evil, wrapped up in taught plotting
—— Arifa Akbar , IndependentOne of Britain’s most accomplished novelists.
—— Ed Cumming , ObserverAn ingenious and atmospheric novel.
—— Simon Shaw , Mail on SundayLawrence Osborne is an experienced, competent author with an impressive knowledge of Asia… Comparisons with Graham Greene seem to be generously offered by other reviewers and I’ve already alluded to Conrad and a Patricia Highsmith yet my impression is that Mr. Osborne has a style all of his own.
—— Gill Chedgey , NudgeMcCarthy has put his finger on something, and he’s nailed it very precisely. It’s how we live now. All the information we process every day. What it’s doing to us.
—— William Leith , Evening Standard






