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Fatherland
Fatherland
Oct 18, 2024 8:44 PM

Author:Robert Harris

Fatherland

PRE-ORDER PRECIPICE, THE THRILLING NEW NOVEL FROM ROBERT HARRIS, NOW - PUBLISHING AUGUST 2024

'A writer who handles suspense like a literary Alfred Hitchcock' Nelson Mandela

April, 1964. The naked body of an old man floats in a lake on the outskirts of Berlin. In one week it will be Adolf Hitler's 75th birthday. A terrible conspiracy is starting to unravel . . .

'Robert Harris has created the whole structure of a totally corrupt society in a way that makes the flesh creep' Sunday Times

'Powerful and chilling . . . convincing in every detail' Daily Telegraph

'Clever and ingenious . . . its breeding is by Orwell, out of P.D. James, a detective story inside a future shock' Daily Mail

Reviews

The research is extraordinary.

—— Victoria Hislop 'My Six Best Books' , Daily Express

Clever and ingenious... Its breeding is by Orwell, out of P. D. James, a detective story inside a future shock

—— Daily Mail

Gripping in the way John Buchan, Len Deighton and John LeCarré are. The writing is superb. This novel lifts its author into a new and superior class

—— The Times

The highest form of thriller... non-stop excitement

—— The Times

Powerful and chilling... convincing in every detail

—— Daily Telegraph

A writer who handles suspense like a literary Alfred Hitchcock

—— Nelson Mandela

Robert Harris has recreated the whole structure of a totally corrupt society in a way that makes the flesh creep

—— Sunday Times

Tightly constructed... grips as tightly as a Nazi's glove

—— Independent on Sunday

A fantastic thriller... The final solution is an utter surprise. Harris reaches it with speed, conveying a whole culture of grotesquery and kitsch

—— Mail on Sunday

Ingenious... fast-paced and beautifully written

—— Esquire

British novelists love to diagnose the state of the nation. Few do it better than Jonathan Coe, who writes with warmth and subversive glee about social change and the comforting mundanities it imperils

—— Spectator

This charming read is as warming, rich and comforting as a mug of hot chocolate

—— The Times

This is another eminently readable Coe, full of believable characters and fizzing dialogue. And it couldn't be more timely

—— Big Issue

Coe has the great gift of combining engaging human stories with a deeper structural pattern that gives the book its heft

—— Guardian

Set in Coe's native
Midlands and told through the
lives of four generations of one
family, beginning with 11-year-old
Mary in 1945, Bournville is a
poignant, clever and witty portrait
of social change and how the
British see themselves.

—— Radio Times, Best Books of the Year

Bournville is Jonathan Coe's most ambitious novel yet . . . a novel about people and place. Entertaining and often poignant, it presents a captivating portrait of how Britons lived then and the way they live now

—— Economist

A book of things blended together: comedy with tragedy, England's past with its present, and cocoa solids with vegetable fat . . . the best fictional portrayal of lockdown that I've read

—— Irish Times

Told with compassion, steadiness, decency and always a glint in the eye, this is a novel that both challenges and delights. For anyone who has felt lost in the past six years, it is like meeting an ally

—— Rachel Joyce, author of Miss Benson's Beetle

Coe is an eminently readable novelist

—— Daily Mail

Full of vibrant characters and fabulous dialogue, which switches from laugh-out-loud funny to extremely poignant

—— Independent

The changing face of postwar Britain is brilliantly captured

—— FT

As the latest in J Coe's Unrest sequence, Bournville is one of the most warm-hearted, brilliant and beguiling of his State of the Nation novels. To show three generations of an ordinary Midlands family, their paths taken and not taken, their friends, lovers, jobs, achievements and losses; to interweave this with 75 years of national history - and to do so with such a lightness of touch is a tremendous achievement. All the absurdities of our nation wrapped up in something as bitter, sweet, and addictive as a bar of the best Bournville chocolate

—— Amanda Craig, author of The Golden Rule

Affectionate, full of good humour, and often moving, this is Coe at his best.

—— Crack Magazine

Slips down a treat

—— Daily Mail

For all the novel's satirical tang and historical sweep, it's at root a tender portrait of apparently simple folk trying to fathom the mystery of their own personalities

—— Spectator

A tender portrayal of the state of the nation through the prism of family relationships

—— Woman & Home

There is much to enjoy here, as in all Coe's novels . . . an intelligent criticism of our shared history since 1945

—— Scotsman

[Coe] has a huge talent for balancing humour with poignancy

—— Book of the month, Good Housekeeping

Mesmerizing

—— TATLER

An enthralling epic about aviation and adventure. A big, baggy blast of a book bulging with sex and drugs, taking in Prohibition-era Montana, wartime London, present-day Hollywood, painting and physics. I loved it

—— REBECCA JONES, BBC ARTS CORRESPONDENT

A generous, escapist treat

—— i-PAPER, 30 BEST BOOKS FOR SUMMER

A soaring epic of female adventure and wanderlust

—— GUARDIAN

Bestselling novelist Maggie Shipstead was struggling to depict a female adventurer. So she became one. The stakes of GREAT CIRCLE are high-for its heroine, literally life or death. Though Shipstead never learned to fly herself, she aligned with her main character Marian Graves in more important ways . . . She is interested in testing her limits

—— L A TIMES

Relentlessly exciting . . . My top recommendation for this summer. Shipstead's sweeping new female-centered epic intertwines the story of Marian, an aviator who wants to circumnavigate the globe with that of actor Hadley Baxter, cast a century later to play Marian in a film. What can Marian's life tell Hadley about her own?

—— WASHINGTON POST

Dazzling prose in the service of an expansive story that covers more than a century and seems to encapsulate the whole wide world. With detailed brilliance, she lavishes heart and empathy on every character. She never wavers, pulls out a twist or two that feel fully earned, and then sticks the landing

—— BOSTON GLOBE

Swinging from one century to the next, from the moneyed splendor of cities to the shifting Antarctic ice, Shipstead's prose overflows with meticulous detail

—— MINNEAPOLIS STAR TRIBUNE

Enthralling. Moving and surprising at every turn

—— GUARDIAN

Sweepingly panoramic and immersive. An audacious epic

—— DAILY MAIL, 'Best Fiction of 2021'

In a moment when our quarantined worlds have become so small, GREAT CIRCLE offers more than just wanderlust; it feels like a liberation.

—— ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY

Maggie Shipstead combines cinematic scope with a poet's eye for detail

—— THE TIMES

The beginning of Maggie Shipstead's astounding novel, a Booker finalist, includes a series of endings: two plane crashes, a sunken ship and several people dead. The bad luck continues when one of the ship's young survivors, Marian, grows up to become a pilot-only to disappear on the job. Shipstead unravels parallel narratives, Marian's and that of another woman whose life is changed by Marian's story, in glorious detail. Every character, whether mentioned once or 50 times, has a specific, necessary presence. It's a narrative made to be devoured, one that is both timeless and satisfying.

—— TIME, BOOK OF THE YEAR

Absolutely dazzling

—— NEWSWEEK

Thrilling

—— DAILY MAIL

GREAT CIRCLE flew us to a different world. A book to devour

—— TELEGRAPH, BOOK OF THE YEAR

A sweeping saga that alternates between the life of a tenacious female aviator in the 1930s and that of a millennial film star cast to play her in a biopic. In death, 'each of us destroys the world,' the author observes - but her engrossing novel is a moving reflection on the will to survive

—— THE ECONOMIST

Artfully constructed and exhuberantly entertaining

—— THE MAIL, BOOK OF THE YEAR

Shipstead soars in this expansive, beautiful novel about women and flight

—— THE STRAITS TIMES

Engrossing, ambitious, beautifully written

—— DAILY EXPESS, Summer Reading

Completely engrossing from the very first page. You won't be able to put this down

—— HELLO MAGAZINE

A brilliant saga of a book. It will absolutely captivate you

—— JANE GARVEY, Fortunately Podcast
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