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Shaken and Stirred
Shaken and Stirred
Apr 5, 2025 12:09 PM

Author:Various,Diana Secker Tesdell

Shaken and Stirred

In this lively collection, wine snobs receive their comeuppance at the hands of Roald Dahl and Edgar Allan Poe; innocents over-imbibe in tales by Jack London and Alice Munro; riotous partying exacts a comic price in stories by P. G. Wodehouse and Kingsley Amis; Charles Jackson and Jean Rhys chronicle liquor-soaked epiphanies; while John Cheever, Vladimir Nabokov and Robert Coover set their characters afloat on surreal, soul-revealing adventures. Here, too, are well-lubricated tales by Dickens, Twain, Beckett, Colette, Dorothy Parker, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Doris Lessing, Frank O'Connor, Penelope Lively, and many more.

The settings include hotels and restaurants, a wine cellar in Italy, a café in Paris, a bar in Dublin, a New York nightclub, Jazz Age speakeasies, suburban lawn parties and the occasional gaol cell, and are peopled by lovers and loners, barmen and chorus girls, youths taking their first sips and experienced tipplers nursing hangovers.

Whether living it up or drowning their sorrows, the vividly drawn characters in these sparkling pages will leave you shaken and stirred.

Reviews

A lovely, sunny, gem of a book that made me feel right at home – full of warmth and wonderful characters that stay with you long after the last page

—— Alexandra Brown, author of Cupcakes at Carringtons

[A] remarkable first novel, an intricately plotted series of episodes in the life of two families ... A challenging family history of violence, murder, rape, castration and magic ... Taylor is a terrific storyteller with a flawless narrative voice and, as a portrait of the impoverished rural south, this novel is a real achievement ... There are ambitious experiments ...The Shore is a mesmerising, powerful read.

—— The Times

An exuberant talent announces her arrival in this Baileys-nominated collection of interlinked stories touching on murder, misogyny and morality … To find the connections between stories, you have to follow names, places and even objects through 200 years of timeline … It’s a strange but pleasurable way to read, an experience at once postmodern and childish …The green, lush landscape, the oyster beds, insects and crabs, are evoked through so many eyes and felt by so many hands that we start to believe in their enduring existence, giving backbone and depth to the green politics of the book …Taylor, it seems, can do dark realism as well as she can the magic kind – in fact, she seems able to do most things. This debut is a testament to an exuberant talent and an original, fearless sensibility. It’s also enormous fun to read.

—— Guardian

Taylor is a beautiful writer, exceptionally talented in fact, and brings us lyrically into the hearts of each of her many characters … I do look forward to reading more Taylor.

—— Irish Independent

I'm very fond of this book...It's very Southern Gothic...It's blisteringly good on systemic male violence against women...It also has moments of humour...It's written in a very lively, compelling way. It's a great book.

—— Sarah Waters, Radio 4 Open Book

I loved this book . . . Epic in breadth but glittering in its detail, The Shore is utterly absorbing.

—— Catherine O'Flynn

A vivid exploration of the struggle for autonomy and the many meanings of what we call home.

—— Eimear McBride, author of A Girl is a Half-formed Thing

In her debut, Taylor has already mastered the most dastardly of high-wire acts; an epic tale that's neither overbearing nor overblown . . . The sprawling tale is marked by domestic violence, murder, rape, castration, drugs and magic; the isolated islands a shelter for some and a prison for others. But there are brilliant moments of intimate, quotidian despair, too.

—— Irish Independent

This is a tremendous debut novel featuring writing which is unusually evocative, often hauntingly so. The prospect of more to come from Taylor is exciting.

—— Independent on Sunday

This ambitious and magical novel is made all the more remarkable by its muscular prose redolent with atmosphere.

—— Daily Mail

Sara Taylor has a completely natural, unforced feel for language and voice: a remarkable debut.

—— Adam Thorpe

A precocious talent.

—— Irish Examiner

Ambiguous gender roles, grotesque situations and the whiff of decay hanging over The Shore – brilliantly imagined through the stench of chicken factories – lend a southern Gothic feel to the writing. There are sections of brutal realism, magic realism and speculative fiction. Other dystopias come to mind, notably David Mitchell’s time-hopping epic Cloud Atlas, but also Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale and its themes of sexually transmitted plagues and subjugation of women.

—— Irish Times

A haunting and staggering debut novel, this is a multi-layered exploration of redneck Virginia through the eyes of its women.

—— Evening Standard magazine

An impressive debut novel

—— Sunday Times

An original new voice in fiction

—— Big Issue

Lyrical writing and quietly tragic storytelling

—— Huffington Post

A really promising debut . . . the beauty of it is astounding . . . enchanting.

—— Tiffany Jenkins

[A] savage yet hyper-readable debut … [a] harrowing, high-octane novel.

—— Observer, 'Paperback of the Week'

This is not a novel for the faint-hearted but dare to read it for the sinuous fluency of the writing.

—— Maureen Duffy

This is an outstanding book, one that makes the reader pause and take stock. It is unsettling, challenging and yet beautiful – made all the more so by the author’s pared back language and careful evocation of the land, marshes, oyster beds and crabs, and the miseries and small joys of island life … this is an extraordinary beginning to a literary career.

—— The Literary Shed

A superb first novel . . . [it is] a significant achievement to produce a book of this quality . . . [there is] a wonderful sense of place.

—— Graham Farmelo

Reminiscent of David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas and just as ambitious

—— Stylist

An impressive debut.

—— The Writes of Women

Already on the longlist for the Baileys Prize, this is an island story told in daisy-chain sequence, a series of succinct vignettes that come together as a vivid portrait of the Shore itself, until you can almost smell the salt air and the stench of slaughtered chicken.

—— For Books Sake

Some extraordinary images . . . a wonderful first novel.

—— Michael Arditti

Taylor’s prose is dreamy and surprisingly playful.

—— S magazine (Sunday Express)

A wonderful read.

—— Interzone

Exuberant, magical and incredibly ambitious, but Sara Taylor pulls it off with style.

—— The Bookbag

Taylor shows a special affinity with the lives of women that makes for a powerful debut

—— Independent on Sunday
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