Author:Kerry Katona

Leanne Crompton had it all - beauty, fame, money. But when Leanne is sacked by her modelling agency she soon finds herself penniless. With her seven-year-old daughter Kia to support, she has no option but to head north to her home town . . . back to her wayward family.
With a brother just released from prison, another being taken for a mug by his wannabe-WAG girlfriend, and two sisters trying to escape her shadow, life with the Cromptons is a harsh reminder of how far she's fallen.
Now, starting over and with an explosive secret to hold on to - the identity of Kia's dad - things start to get tough. Can she trust her ruthless mother Tracy not to sell her out to the papers? Or will Kia's dad catch up with her and silence her for good?
Tough Love is the startling debut novel from former pop star and tabloid favourite Kerry Katona. Her memoir, Too Much Too Young, was a Sunday Times top ten bestseller.
Absolutely gripping
—— Lynn Barber , ObserverKerry Katona, novelist - Sheer. Freakin'. Genius...
—— Guardian Weekend Magazine -The Measure[Tough Love] is a good-hearted read...you'll rattle through it in one sitting
—— Kate Mosse, Sunday Times StyleTough Love comes laden with grit, and, thankfully, some humour, plus heaps of diverse characters
—— Henry Sutton, the MirrorCan 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






