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All the Good Things
All the Good Things
Apr 19, 2025 4:46 AM

Author:Clare Fisher

All the Good Things

What if you did a very bad thing... but that wasn't the end of the story?

Twenty-one year old Beth is in prison. The thing she did is so bad she doesn't deserve ever to feel good again.

But her counsellor, Erika, won't give up on her. She asks Beth to make a list of all the good things in her life. So Beth starts to write down her story, from sharing silences with Foster Dad No. 1, to flirting in the Odeon on Orange Wednesdays, to the very first time she sniffed her baby's head.

But at the end of her story, Beth must confront the bad thing.

What is the truth hiding behind her crime? And does anyone - even a 100% bad person - deserve a chance to be good?

'Heartfelt, heartbreaking, and genuinely joyous' Francis Spufford, author of Golden Hill

Reviews

Heartfelt, heartbreaking, and genuinely joyous

—— Francis Spufford, author of 'Golden Hill'

Compassionate and beautifully written

—— Carys Bray, author of A Song For Issy Bradley

A funny and hopeful story... Clare writes with compassion and insight

—— Kit de Waal, bestselling author of 'My Name is Leon'

I raced through this beautiful novel, which oscillates between pain and hope, anger and joy. An important novel which celebrates the fact that good things exist inside every person, no matter how ignored or hidden.

—— Sarah Butler, author of 'Ten Things I've Learned About Love' and 'Before the Fire'

A heartbreaking, vital and seamless insight into a life that might otherwise be ignored or judged. The voice of Bethany is perfect - compelling, whip-smart and deeply affecting.

—— Emma Jane Unsworth, author of 'Animals'

Clare Fisher's novel addresses poverty, fear, and desperation. The protagonist, Beth, must fight for every good thing in her life. She has grown up in foster care and has no friends or family to protect her when she moves London. In many ways, it is a novel about loneliness and isolation. Yet throughout there is an indomitable love. It is a book that burns with compassion, both Beth's and Fisher's. The reader is left with the desire to find whatever resources of empathy they have and to live with greater kindness.

—— Rowan Hisayo Buchanan, author of Harmless Like You

A moving, compassionate account of someone struggling hard for redemption

—— Sunday Times

A sparky and unsettling debut

—— Guardian

Weaver's books get better each time - tense, complex, written with flair as well as care

—— Guardian

Terrific

—— Sunday Times

Tim Weaver writes books so meticulously researched that the reader is educated as well as entertained, enthralled and intrigued

—— Liz Nugent , Sunday Times bestselling author of Lying in Wait

A dark, complex and visceral read

—— Financial Times

The story-telling is little short of brilliant

—— Crime Fiction Lover

Perfect plotting, great characterisation, and the kind of payoff that a thriller of this calibre deserves

—— Bookgeeks

Darkly atmospheric . . . Beautifully and evocatively written, clever in structure, and decidedly unusual . . . a novel that will surely feature on prize shortlists.

—— Allan Massie , Scotsman

Comparisons with Jim Crace’s Harvest or Hilary Mantel’s Tudor novels stand . . . There is a feeling that [The Western Wind] could establish Harvey as a commercial, as well as literary, contender.

—— Patricia Nicol , Sunday Times

Harvey isn't afraid to end a chapter with a jolt of drama . . . As tension mounts towards the final (or first) act, it's hard not to be riveted.

—— Anthony Cummins , Observer

A gripping mystery.

—— Saskia Murphy , Big Issue

The questions of faith and the purpose of humanity raised in this bold, impressive and lustrously written reimagining of a past world are as important as the solving of the crime.

—— Daily Mail

Samantha Harvey’s brooding historical mystery The Western Wind . . . is rich in both local and historical detail; the novel powerfully conveys the murky atmosphere of Oakham . . . [Reve’s] moral path is as muddy as the tracks down to the river.

—— Rohan Maitzen , Times Literary Supplement

Blending human interest with ecclesiastical "realpolitik", this is a riveting portrait of a "community in the grip of secrecy.

—— The Week

This medieval whodunnit evokes the rural past with skill . . . shares common ground with Sarah Perry's The Essex Serpent and Andrew Michal Hurley's The Loney.

—— Laura Freeman , The Times

A peek behind the respectable curtain of village life, narrated by someone who has seen more than most… Reve’s voice develops into one of freshness and restrained lyricism.

—— Simon Baker , Literary Review

A consistently interesting contemporary voice.

—— Ben East , The National

Samantha Harvey's fourth novel is set in the 1400s but feels vivid and intimate.

—— Good Housekeeping

In the end, the questions of faith and the purpose of humanity raised in this bold, impressive and lustrously written reimagining of a past world are as important as the solving of the crime.

—— Elizabeth Buchan , Daily Mail

Harvey's luminous prose, tight plotting and rich characterisation make this a riveting read.

—— Move To Town & Country

Ingenious… Harvey has captured an unconsciously sophisticated, morally muddled, truly good and truly interesting protagonist.

—— Minoo Dinshaw , The Oldie

A visceral sense of the smell and look of the medieval world has knowing echoes of Umberto Eco’s The Name of the Rose. Eco would also have admired the playfulness of the book’s shape… And Agatha Christie would recognise the cleverness of the reveal.

—— Mark Lawson , Catholic Herald

Harvey’s imagination, and her empathy for medieval Oakham, make this a convincing tale... [The Western Wind] beguile[s] the reader with numerous twists and turns.

—— Catherine Pepinster , The Tablet **Novel of the Week**

Samantha Harvey ingeniously builds a marvelously convincing medieval world out of modern language.

—— Justine Jordan , Guardian, **Books of the Year**

The Western Wind is an unexpected but triumphant foray into historical fiction… it is both an unconventional murder mystery and an unforgettable re-creation of 15th-century rural life.

—— Nick Rennison , BBC Histroy Magazine, **Books of the Year**

[The Western Wind is] worth returning to... it's terrific. It's formally interesting, it's got a heart, it's well put together, it's great.

—— Richard Lea , Guardian Books Podcast, Our Favourite Books of the Year

This is the novel of recent years that I have most frequently pressed on people; it is magnificent… It’s a cunning mystery – who is responsible for the death of the village’s benefactor? – and a profound exploration of faith, guilt and social cohesion. What elevates it is the quality of Harvey’s attention to the minuscule kinks and reflexes of human behaviour.

—— Alex Clark , Guardian

Ragnar Jónasson writes with a chilling, poetic beauty - a must-read addition to the growing canon of Iceland Noir

—— Peter James

His clues are traditional and beautifully finessed - and he keeps you turning the pages

—— The Independent on Snowblind

Distinctive blend of Nordic noir and golden age detective fiction...atmospheric...economical and evocative prose

—— The Guardian on Nightblind

Seductive ... an old-fashioned murder mystery with a strong central character and the fascinating background of a small Icelandic town cut off by snow. Ragnar does claustrophobia beautifully

—— Ann Cleeves

The ending hits the reader like a kick in the stomach

—— FRÉTTATIMINN ****

Jonasson's books have breathed new life into Nordic noir ...all the skilful plotting of an old-fashioned whodunit although it feels bitingly contemporary in setting and tone

—— Sunday Express

The threads lie in various places, the plot is well woven and the pieces in the puzzle come together well in the end. The structure is good, the main characters are believable, the story flows well, everyone is a suspect á la Agatha Christie and the solution unveils the mystery and leads the readers to the truth. But not all the truth, as some things are better left hidden

—— Morgunbladid (Icelandic newspaper)

Hulda Hermannsdottir is a welcome addition to the selection of Icelandic crime fiction protagonists . . . It is almost impossible to put the book down until the last word has been read

—— Fréttablaðið ****

Out of all of Ragnar's books, this is the one I like the most . . . The book of his which reminds me most of Agatha Christie

—— Kiljan, on The Island

A very good book, gripping and interesting, with all the threads carefully managed. Hopefully the author will publish as many books as possible with lead character Hulda

—— Vikan Magazine, on The Island

Praise for Ragnar Jónasson

—— -

No country associated with the label Nordic noir is as bleak, cold, snowy and empty as Iceland. And no crime writer portrays those elements as evocatively and scarily as Ragnar Jonasson

—— The Times

A classic crime story seen through a uniquely Icelandic lens... first rate and highly recommended

—— Lee Child, on , Snowblind

A modern take on Agatha Christie-­-style mystery, as twisty as any slalom . . .

—— Ian Rankin, on , Snowblind

Ragnar Jónasson writes with a chilling, poetic beauty - a must-read addition to the growing canon of Iceland Noir

—— Peter James

Distinctive blend of Nordic noir and golden age detective fiction...atmospheric...economical and evocative prose

—— The Guardian on Nightblind

Seductive ... an old-fashioned murder mystery with a strong central character and the fascinating background of a small Icelandic town cut off by snow. Ragnar does claustrophobia beautifully

—— Ann Cleeves

The ending hits the reader like a kick in the stomach

—— FRÉTTATIMINN ****

Jonasson's books have breathed new life into Nordic noir ...all the skilful plotting of an old-fashioned whodunit although it feels bitingly contemporary in setting and tone

—— Sunday Express

Hulda Hermannsdottir is a welcome addition to the selection of Icelandic crime fiction protagonists . . . It is almost impossible to put the book down until the last word has been read

—— Fréttablaðið ****

Out of all of Ragnar's books, this is the one I like the most . . . The book of his which reminds me most of Agatha Christie

—— Kiljan, on The Island

The threads lie in various places, the plot is well woven and the pieces in the puzzle come together well in the end. The structure is good, the main characters are believable, the story flows well, everyone is a suspect á la Agatha Christie and the solution unveils the mystery and leads the readers to the truth. But not all the truth, as some things are better left hidden

—— Morgunbladid (Icelandic newspaper)

A very good book, gripping and interesting, with all the threads carefully managed. Hopefully the author will publish as many books as possible with lead character Hulda

—— Vikan Magazine, on The Island
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