Author:Jane Green
Number one bestseller Jane Green - author of Babyville and The Love Verb - explores the hectic life of a single career girl looking to find love in her hilarious first novel Straight Talking.
This could be about your best friend. Or your girlfriend. Or it might be about you.
Are you Tasha - single and searching?
Or her best friends:
Andy, hooked on passion;
Mel, stuck in a relationship with a bastard;
or Emma, endlessly waiting for her other half to propose?
Do you know an Andrew - suave, good-looking and head over heels in love . . . with himself?
Or a Simon - allergic to commitment and dangerously treacherous?
Or even an Adam - handsome, kind, humorous, but too nice to be sexy?
Follow them all in their journey to find fulfillment and love.
'Funny, honest, superb' Company
'Any woman who's suffered a relationship trauma will die for this book. Wickedly funny, will make you squeal with laughter' Cosmopolitan
Wickedly funny
—— CosmopolitanCancel all engagements and read it
—— TatlerOur very favourite Keyes novel yet
—— HeatDinah Jefferies has a remarkable gift for conjuring up another time and place with lush descriptions, full of power and intensity
—— Kate Furnivall on 'The Silk Merchant's Daughter'My ideal read - I couldn't put it down
—— Santa Montefiore on 'The Tea Planter's Wife'Delightful!
—— Katie FfordePerfect, feel-good loveliness
—— Miranda DickinsonThe Futures is a haunting story of a relationship going wrong, set against the backdrop of a world that feels like it has gone utterly wrong, too. This will appeal to anybody who's been an early twenty-something and not known where life will go next. I loved it
—— Gillian McAllister , author of Everything but the TruthThe Futures is a love story and so much more. It captures the heartaches and exhilarations of early adulthood with a keen eye, a big heart, superb writing and an artfully intricate plot. This is a book for people of all ages looking for a place in the world, and Anna Pitoniak is a young novelist with some serious writing chops
—— Meg Mitchell Moore , author of The AdmissionsAnna Pitoniak's debut novel, The Futures, is the perfect cocktail of smart prose, heartwarming characters, and unmatched savvy about modern city life. Like The Love Affairs of Nathaniel P. or A Fortunate Age, this book will amaze and elate you
—— Kristopher Jansma , author of The Unchangeable Spots of LeopardsMesmerizing . . . The novel's alternating structure is hypnotic. Pitoniak is an absolute ventriloquist, completely inhabiting the voice of the two protagonists - their ambitions, anxieties, pettiness, sadness, and great love for one another. I couldn't put it down
—— Sunil Yapa , author of Your Heart is a Muscle the Size of a FistSet amid the 2008 financial collapse, Pitoniak's assured debut explores the cost of realizing-and misinterpreting-one's dreams . . . Navigating terrain-love and youth, college and city life-that's often oversimplified, Pitoniak eschews cliché for nuanced characterization and sharply observed detail. Evan and Julia ring true as 20-somethings, but Pitoniak's novel also speaks to anyone who has searched among possible futures for the way back to what Julia calls 'the person I had been all along'
—— Publishers WeeklyPitoniak's well-plotted, character-driven, interior-focused novel captures the knowable angst of the unknowable possibilities of modern young adulthood
—— BooklistPitoniak expertly captures both the excitement and the oppressive darkness of being young and at sea in New York City, the unsettlingly thin line between freedom and free fall. Deeply empathetic-and always engaging. A bittersweet coming-of-age drama and a portrait of an era
—— KirkusThe Futures takes place on the cusp of the 2008 market crash, and so perfectly encapsulates that time of life when everything was just beginning, when you had no idea who you were or where you were going
—— PopsugarPitoniak maintains her keen eye for the universal insecurities facing her generation today, from romantic uncertainties and the relative benefits and downsides of hedge fund and nonprofit jobs to the emotional effort it requires to negotiate the predetermined facts of one's upbringing with the person one chooses to become
—— Harper's BazaarPitoniak's debut focuses on that time of life that is at turns both exhilarating and terrifying: right after getting out of college, when you're forced to confront who you are and who you want to be, when you know life is just beginning, but you're also starting to feel like many of your options are fading away
—— Best New Books of 2017 , NylonPitoniak's precise and incisive powers of observation gives us a book with startling grace notes
—— NPR.orgAnna Pitoniak's inspired debut centers on two recent college grads who move to New York City together during the 2008 recession and watch their relationship change drastically
—— InstyleThe One is one of a kind – and singularly good.
—— Barbara CopperthwaiteA fresh, compelling, psychological thriller that will keep you guessing!
—— Mandy Baggotinsanely brilliant
—— Gillian McAllisterpacy, thrilling and very original. The plot is fabulous
—— Askews NewsletterA page-turning psychological thriller with a difference, this is guaranteed to keep you on the edge of your seat.
—— Irish Examiner