Author:Richard Yates

Young, newly married and intensely ambitious, Michael Davenport is trying to make a living as a writer. His adoring wife, Lucy, has a private fortune that he won't touch in case it compromises his art. She in turn is never quite certain of what is expected of her. All she knows is that everyone else seems, somehow, happier.
In this magnificent novel, at once bitterly sad and achingly funny, Richard Yates again shows himself to be the supreme chronicler of the American Dream and its casualties.
A wonderful writer with a merciless eye
—— Time OutBad couples, sad, sour marriages, young hopes corroded by suburban life... These are bitterly perceptive books
—— New StatesmanYates is a truthful and ruthless writer. He intends to spare his readers nothing
—— GuardianJean Plaidy conveys the texture of various patches of the past with such rich complexity
—— GuardianJean Plaidy's books are a celebration of women's spirit throughout history
—— Daily ExpressIt is hard to better Jean Plaidy when she's in form... both elegant and exciting as she steers a stylish path through the feuding Plantagenets
—— Daily MirrorIn The Lizard Cage, Connelly peels away much of the political rhetoric and gives us the human story, which is both fragile and resilient.
—— Vancouver SunConnelly is fluid and well-paced, and her fictive prison world, set in the actual political hellhole that is present-day Burma, is as affecting as any UN statistical report about the conditions of life in that ruined country.
—— Edmonton JournalMuch more fun than the reader has any right to expect
—— Weekly StandardIt's as fresh as if it were written this morning and as classic as Jane Austen. I'm very happy to have met it
—— Donald WestlakeA good story, flourishing characters, and the most persuasive narrative voice
—— GuardianA classic tale of the triumph of youthful naivety over middle-aged cynicism
—— Good Book GuideClassic coming of age novel
—— Oxford Times






