Author:P.G. Wodehouse
As always, Bertie is about to find himself in the soup (or 'up to the knees in bisque') and Jeeves is poised to pull him out - quite possibly after pushing him in in the first place. In this omnibus of characteristically hilarious short stories and novels, Jeeves is for the first time shockingly employed to resolve the woes of someone other than Bertie Wooster. Contains The Mating Season, Ring for Jeeves and Very Good, Jeeves...
A love story, a road trip and family drama all rolled into one brilliant page turner. Jojo Moyes has triumphed again
—— Hello!Intense, twisty and beautifully written . . . unique
—— Daily MailExtraordinary
—— Emily St John Mandel on THE LASTBrilliant... Byatt's fiction, like Matisse's art, pays close attention to colours and contours of surfaces, then probes beneath them to reveal further suprises
—— NewsdayExquisite triptych... The Matisse Stories is richly drawn and touches upon things that matter to people
—— PeopleStepping into the world of The Pink House is like getting home and discovering someone has already run a hot, bubbly bath for you after a hard day's work. Emma and Hugh's story is intriguing and twisty. They've been married for what feels like forever and it's been mostly...well...okay. The children are great but they're independent now, and the chance to relocate to Hugh's idyllic family home in the country is too difficult for Emma to resist. What follows is a voyage of discovery for them all that turns Emma's largely contented life upside down. A kaleidoscope of family complications tends to threaten Emma's equilibrium but nothing daunted, she breezes forward and gets right on with socking it to them all.
I adored every moment of this blissful book!
Praise for Catherine Alliott
—— -Warm, witty and wise
—— Daily MailA huge treat. Hilarious yet poignant
—— Sophie KinsellaHer writing is both intelligent and sparkling
—— Marian KeyesHilarious and full of surprises
—— Daily TelegraphThis warm-hearted, uplifting story is filled with happiness, summer sun and ice cream. It's the perfect holiday read.
—— Daily RecordThe perfect summer romance novel to give you butterflies, celebrating all things sunshine, the seaside and ice cream - yes please!
—— Chat magazineThe perfect summer read to pack in your suitcase
—— CandisA lovely, heart-warming read
—— CultureflyA perfect read for your holiday
—— That's Life!This is the ultimate summer seaside getaway read
—— WomanIrresistible comfort read
—— GlamourHonest and beautifully written
—— Woman & HomeNoble is the mistress of the tearjerking message of love
—— ExpressA moving and warm-hearted story of friendship and love . . . Elizabeth Noble writes wonderfully real and relatable characters and then puts their lives under the microscope, weaving their stories with tenderness and humanity
—— Yours MagazineOther People's Husbands is a compelling, honest and uplifting tale which will have you hooked from first page to last
—— Lancashire Evening PostAn artful game of distortion... Clever handling
—— Anthony Quinn , Mail on SundayA curious piece of autobiographical fiction
—— David Sexton , Evening StandardA wisecracking thriller hightailing between love and betrayal, with serious counter-espionage credentials thrown in... This is ultimately a book about writing, wordplay and knowingness
—— Catherine Taylor , Sunday TelegraphNo contemporary novelist is more enthralled by what goes on inside the human skull than Ian McEwan... Sweet Tooth, which juxtaposes contrasting casts of mind, reminds you that, as well as intelligence, the intelligence service fascinates McEwan... Always excellent at conjuring up places and periods on the cusp of dramatic change... McEwan atmospherically resurrects the strife-ridden Britain of 1972 -73... Similarities and contrasts between the mentality and mind games of the secret service and those of the creative writer are increasingly brought to the fore. Doubling back and forth across genre boundaries, Sweet Tooth takes risks: narrative loiterings and twists whose purpose isn’t at first apparent, a payoff that is long delayed. But – ideally read more than once – this acute, witty novel is a winningly cunning addition to McEwan’s fictional surveys of intelligence
—— Peter Kemp , Sunday TimeMust read... Intrigue, love and mutual betrayal by a master of the art
—— The LadyThe great thing about McEwan is that, despite his success, he continues to work hard, producing ever more accessible and entertaining stories
—— Henry Sutton , Daily MirrorCarefully researched
—— John Scarlett , Daily TelegraphMcEwan, as always, presents an engaging narrator... The plot is fantastic... McEwan plays with the readers expectations, and surpasses them all with a fabulous ending that makes me itch to re-read this superb novel all over again. Sweet Tooth marks another triumph for a brilliant British author
—— Bookgeeks.co.ukA pleasing, tricksy beast with a subsumed sense of metatextuality likely to be pleasing to his fans
—— BookmunchAdroitly done...highly diverting
—— D.J. Taylor , Literary ReviewA triumphant shedding of genre limitations
—— Adam Mars-Jones , London Review of BooksThis most cunning of authors entertains and manipulates his readers. Sweet Tooth is a masterclass in the art of fiction
—— Paul Sidey , Book OxygenIan McEwan is getting better and better… Supremely tense, intellectually sharp, and honed as hell
—— William Leith , Evening StandardMcEwan’ssmoothly contrived thriller hightails between love and betrayal, with serious counter-espionage credentials thrown in
—— Sunday Telegraph SevenAn expertly crafted thriller written with a bucketload of suspense and wit
—— Hannah Britt , Daily ExpressAs richly textured as anything Ian McEwan has written
—— MaiBrilliantly cunning… It’s a story of love, betrayal and duplicity, with the most startling deception reserved for the final pages
—— Mail on Sunday (You)Playful, clever, knowing and full of stories
—— Absolutely ChelseaSupremely tense, intellectually sharp, and honed as hell
—— William Leith , ScotsmanBeyond virtuoso twists and turns, McEwan lays out the foreign landscape of 40 years ago – from smoky pubs to fuming punditry – with wry, affectionate panache
—— Boyd Tonkin , iTricksy, but satisfying
—— Justin Cartwright , ObserverThe sense of narrative purpose exerts its pull from the first
—— John Mullan , Guardian