Author:Bryce Courtenay
From Bryce Courtenay comes a new novel about Africa. The time is 1939. White South Africa is a deeply divided nation with many of the Afrikaner people frantically opposed to the English.
The world is also on the brink of war and South Africa elects to fight for the Allied cause against Germany. Six year-old Tom Fitzsaxby finds himself in The Boys Farm, an orphanage in a remote town in the high mountains, where the Afrikaners side fiercely with Hitler's Germany.
Tom's English name proves sufficient for him to be ostracised, marking him as an outsider. And so begin some of life's tougher lessons for the small lonely boy. Like the whitethorn, one of Africa's most enduring plants, Tom learns how to survive in the harsh climate of racial hatred. Then a terrible event sends him on a journey to ensure that justice is done. On the way, his most unexpected discovery is love.
This is chick-lit at its poolside best
—— EveHugely enjoyable
—— heatThis is one to gobble up in a single sitting
—— CompanyA witty novel about love
—— BAnother question I've been regularly asked over the past year is what models I had in mind when writing Curious Incident. Was it To Kill a Mockingbird? Was it Catcher in the Rye? In fact, the book most often in my mind was Pride and Prejudice
—— Mark HaddonAn incredibly funny, very upmarket love story with an enchanting heroine and the perfect romantic hero: a tartar with a heart of gold
—— Jilly CooperThe Mozart opera of novels and again a transcendent union of structure and content in which unhappy marriage is the reward for those who show a weakness of character and lifelong happiness is a province reserved only for those "who truly know themselves"
—— Kate AtkinsonFor those of us who suspect all the mysteries of life are contained in the microcosm of the family, that personal relationships prefigure all else, the work of Jane Austen is the Rosetta Stone of literature
—— Anna QuindlenHow could these novels ever seem remote...the gaiety is unextinguished today, the irony has kept its bite, the reasoning is still sweet, the sparkle undiminished, as comedies they are irresistibly and as nearly flawless as any fiction could be
—— Eudora WeltyThat young lady has a talent for describing the involvements of feelings and characters of ordinary life which is to me the most wonderful I ever met with
—— Sir Walter ScottThe most perfect, the most characteristic, the most eminently quintessential of its author's works
—— George Saintsbury (1894)A delicate meditation on mortality, decay and the fading of beauty
—— Martin Sixsmith , The WeekHistorical fiction at its best
—— Orlando Figes , The WeekNo novel is perfect, but this small, wonderfully atmospheric and immensely poignant story...comes very close
—— Sunday Times, *Summer Reads of 2021*