Author:Catherine Cookson
Born into poverty, Katie Mulholland is forced to find work as a maid in the house of a wealthy family. But the beautiful young girl captures the eye of her employer’s evil son, who rapes her and leaves her pregnant.
Out for themselves, the family forces her to marry the cruel manager of their mines. But Katie’s fate changes course when one man offers her the opportunity to make her own fortune, and to discover real love . . .
Spanning Katie’s life from 1860 to the height of the Second World War, this is a timeless tale of one woman's fight for the happy ending she deserves.
Catherine Cookson was the original and bestselling saga writer, selling over 100 million copies of her novels. If you like Dilly Court, Katie Flynn or Donna Douglas, you'll love Catherine Cookson.
Queen of raw family romances
—— TelegraphHumour, toughness, resolution and generosity are Cookson virtues . . . In the specialised world of women's popular fiction, Cookson has created her own territory
—— Helen Dunmore, The TimesCatherine Cookson soars above her rivals
—— Mail on SundayYour next hit of over-the-top couture drama ... The perfect indulgent long-weekend read.
—— Elle.comSomething for everyone ... A smorgasbord of rich delights.
—— New York Journal of BooksWhat a fantastic start to what is going to be prove to be a fantastic series. Superbly written … it draws you into the story from the word go.
—— Ginger Book Geek BlogI couldn't put this warm, authentic and compelling novel down … I cheered, laughed, held my breath and wept alongside Fran, her family and friends. I'm already hooked!
—— Hair Past A Freckle BlogIntriguing, emotional, and intense … Would recommend
—— Linda's Book Obsession BlogA heartwarming story of a close-knit community trying to make it through a war. I’d recommend this book to anyone who loves their badass women, war novels, and stories of love and unity in the time of adversity
—— This is Lit BlogThere are certainly plenty of cliffhangers that need resolution and I'd say a few more skeletons to emerge from the closet too
—— Shaz's Book BlogIn this innovative and deeply moving debut, Regina Porter has mastered the kind of alchemy found in a great painting by Poussin: her canvas is vast, her subject ambitious, and yet her execution is so brilliantly devoted to particulars that it creates a miraculous intimacy. The beauty of this book lies in how Porter's characters, through resilience and community, art and creative love, cut new doors out of the corners they've been backed into by history.
—— Garth GreenwellThrillingly ambitious, deeply affecting ... There is so much offered here – race, history, love, loss, and family, just to name a few – that this debut novel should be considered nothing less than a supreme act of generosity.
—— Jamel BrinkleyThe Travelers is a great, grand tabernacle of a novel, under the roof of which it seems the entire history of the United States and all its people has been gathered into a single blazing congregation. It is full of tales tall and short, lives black, white, and every shade between, from the north, the south, east, and west. None but the biggest-hearted, sharpest-eyed, most generous-spirited of writers could pull off a book like this. Regina Porter is some kind of visionary.
—— Paul HardingRegina Porter’s The Travelers is not only the compelling intergenerational saga of two intertwining families but also a deadpan and mordant chronicle of 20th-century America’s casual intolerance and racial violence, as well as a series of portraits of intrepid women, a celebration of family responsibility, and an impassioned reminder that we most honor those we loved by continuing to love others.
—— Jim Shepard, National Book Award shortlisted author of Like You’d Understand, AnywayIn The Travelers, generations of two families – one black and one white – journey across time, race, geography and the wounds of history with sweeping breadth and disarming intimacy. Porter's debut signals the arrival of a fully formed, singular talent. You've been wanting to read this book for a long time; it's just that Porter hadn't written it yet.
—— Ayana Mathis[A] brilliant second novel… nothing is lost on Scibona, who builds his narrative masterfully over four hundred pages…[with] always-thrilling prose.
—— David Annand , Literary ReviewTen years after his debut with The End, Scibona has produced another exceptional, challenging work… the prose is often stunning.
—— Jeffrey Burke , Mail on SundayA muscular account of human frailty and a pitiless critique of western masculinity… The Volunteer drifts and broods… its cumulative power is like sustained rolling thunder.
—— Xan Brooks , GuardianA bravura piece of writing that reels you in before Scibona starts to make us sweat over his purpose… This is heart-rendering stuff, superbly done… Scibona lavishes attention on practically everyone his sprawling narrative reveals.
—— Anthony Cummins , ObserverScibona is an observant, lyrical writer, and the strength of his images and musicality of his sentences are almost enough to carry the novel on their own.
—— Kim Fu , Times Literary SupplementA searing yet poetic record of war and the lies people live by.
—— Economist, *Books of the Year*Monumental and powerful... The Old Drift is a novel that will leave you reeling and picking apart its many ideas, leaving almost no concept unexplored – whether that’s colonialism, capitalism, racial identity, political identity, climate change or government surveillance... Its ultimate hook though is Serpell’s awe-inspiring deftness at jumping from one location, time and character to the next, and fixing you firmly in each and every one. It’s a decidedly impressive debut
—— Kim Evans , CultureflyFunny, inventive and propulsive
—— Tadzio Koelb , Times Literary SupplementNamwali Serpell’s electric debut novel The Old Drift is richly satisfying in its storytelling and ambition… Sweeping but also playful, Serpell as a major talent
—— Financial Times, *Summer book 2019: critics' pick'One of my favourite books for many, many years, it's complex and beautiful
—— Sarah Jessica Parker , Sunday TelegraphFull of magic, history, and humor, The Old Drift will be unlike anything you’ve ever read
—— BuzzfeedSerpell expertly weaves in a preponderance of themes, issues, and history, including Zambia’s independence, the AIDS epidemic, white supremacy, patriarchy, familial legacy, and the infinite variations of lust and love. Recalling the work of Toni Morrison and Gabriel García Márquez as a sometimes magical, sometimes horrifically real portrait of a place, Serpell’s novel goes into the future of the 2020s, when the various plot threads come together in a startling conclusion. Intricately imagined, brilliantly constructed, and staggering in its scope, this is an astonishing novel
—— Publisher’s Weekly, starred reviewNamwali Serpell’s spellbinding debut is worth the investment
—— Joanne Finney , Good HousekeepingThe Old Drift is an astounding novel… inventive and powerful–it is also surprisingly funny and plays brilliantly with language… beautiful, rewarding and thought-provoking
—— Esme Choonara , Socialist WorkerAn original, poetic novel from an already award-winning writer is one of the year’s most anticipated debuts
—— Marta Bausells , ELLEAn impressive book that demands your attention, and rewards your commitment with a beautifully told, richly evocative tale
—— Will Salmon , SFXComparisons with Gabriel García Márquez are inevitable and likely warranted. But this novel's generous spirit, sensory richness, and visionary heft make it almost unique among magical realist epics
—— Kirkus, starred reviewA mastery of language, a deftness in description, and a dip into surrealist and speculative elements makes The Old Drift a worthwhile study in holding together several storylines through the characterization of those searching for their calling, and the cost of those pursuits
—— Electric LiteratureThis inventive first novel by Serpell, a Caine Prize winner, spans two centuries in Zambian history, mixing styles from Gothic to Afrofuturist
—— BBCI recommend Namwali Serpell's 2019 Zambian tour de force The Old Drift. This is a long book – all 563 pages of it – by a writer whose prose and outsize imagination will hold you spellbound throughout
—— Conversation UKA tremendous novel, completely hypnotising
—— Lucy Ellmann , ObserverI loved Namwali Serpell's novel The Old Drift, a shimmering, shape-shifting epic of Zambia written over twenty years
—— David Issacs , White Review, *Books of the Year*