Penelope Lively has written many prize-winning novels for adults and children. They include- The Road To Lichfield, According To Mark, Moon Tiger (which won the 1987 Booker Prize), Heat Wave, Spiderweb, The Photograph, Making It Up and Consequences. Penelope Lively lives in London.
Lively immediately plunges us into an entirely convincing world of
bustling family life...exceptionally well observed and gloriously
enjoyable...this should be rated as one of her most impressive
works
*Guardian*
One of those ridiculously simple, ridiculously readable novels
whose artistry only becomes apparent when you put it down with a
sign of regret, having devoured it in one sitting...Lively still
displays an economy and an elegance that put younger writers to
shame
*Sunday Telegraph*
Lively's brilliance is of the creeping kind. There is a sense of
formality, which falls away as the novel gains pace and builds
towards an unforeseen end. She is particularly good at bending
language to make it fit her cool and clear voice...Lively succeeds
brilliantly in getting a hold on the climate of family life. Slowly
we absorb the details that get lost in the bluster and flurry until
we are so drawn in, so tightly contained in the dynamics of this
one, that the end, when it comes, is simply devastating
*The Times*
A pleasure to read, hugely enjoyable, consistently absorbing,
hilarious
*Independent*
An involving emotional drama and an insightful examination of
changing family values
*Easy Living*
The complexities and silences of family life are intelligently and
subtly explored...a very engaging novel, continuously interesting
and often moving
*Scotsman*
Gorgeous
*Guardian Books of the Year*
Sympathetic and observant, Lively moves fluidly between
present-tense set-piece scenes and silent monologues, placing the
novel's revelations where they will be most effective, and allowing
implications - about marriage, feminism and personal ambition - to
blossom slowly
*Sunday Times*
Penelope Lively at her best, sharp-eyed but sympathetic, deftly
steering the reader from one point of view to another. This novel
should delight her regular readers and ensnare new ones
*Evening Standard*
A very readable, well-paced novel peopled with Lively's customary
immaculately observed and impeccably rounded characters
*Independent on Sunday*
Lively skilfully mingles past and present, as she peels away the
layers to uncover a family secret of which no one speaks...Lively's
astute skewering of family relations reverberates in the mind long
afterwards
*Daily Mail*
Lively plays her sleight of hand with admirable dexterity. The
dialogue is pitch-perfect, the writing crisp and the humour
wonderfully dry
*Tatler*
Gripping. An intelligent look at family relationships and the
knock-on effects of past events on the present. It's an absorbing
tale of mystery and intrigue that will leave you wondering what
lies behind even the nicest façade
*Woman & Home*
A deeply satisfying, eloquent family-fabric novel
*Good Housekeeping*
Lively immediately plunges us into an entirely convincing world of
bustling family life...exceptionally well observed and gloriously
enjoyable...this should be rated as one of her most impressive
works * Guardian *
One of those ridiculously simple, ridiculously readable novels
whose artistry only becomes apparent when you put it down with a
sign of regret, having devoured it in one sitting...Lively still
displays an economy and an elegance that put younger writers to
shame * Sunday Telegraph *
Lively's brilliance is of the creeping kind. There is a sense of
formality, which falls away as the novel gains pace and builds
towards an unforeseen end. She is particularly good at bending
language to make it fit her cool and clear voice...Lively succeeds
brilliantly in getting a hold on the climate of family life. Slowly
we absorb the details that get lost in the bluster and flurry until
we are so drawn in, so tightly contained in the dynamics of this
one, that the end, when it comes, is simply devastating * The Times
*
A pleasure to read, hugely enjoyable, consistently absorbing,
hilarious * Independent *
An involving emotional drama and an insightful examination of
changing family values * Easy Living *
The complexities and silences of family life are intelligently and
subtly explored...a very engaging novel, continuously interesting
and often moving * Scotsman *
Gorgeous -- David Vann * Guardian Books of the Year *
Sympathetic and observant, Lively moves fluidly between
present-tense set-piece scenes and silent monologues, placing the
novel's revelations where they will be most effective, and allowing
implications - about marriage, feminism and personal ambition - to
blossom slowly * Sunday Times *
Penelope Lively at her best, sharp-eyed but sympathetic, deftly
steering the reader from one point of view to another. This novel
should delight her regular readers and ensnare new ones * Evening
Standard *
A very readable, well-paced novel peopled with Lively's customary
immaculately observed and impeccably rounded characters *
Independent on Sunday *
Lively skilfully mingles past and present, as she peels away the
layers to uncover a family secret of which no one speaks...Lively's
astute skewering of family relations reverberates in the mind long
afterwards * Daily Mail *
Lively plays her sleight of hand with admirable dexterity. The
dialogue is pitch-perfect, the writing crisp and the humour
wonderfully dry * Tatler *
Gripping. An intelligent look at family relationships and the
knock-on effects of past events on the present. It's an absorbing
tale of mystery and intrigue that will leave you wondering what
lies behind even the nicest facade * Woman & Home *
A deeply satisfying, eloquent family-fabric novel * Good
Housekeeping *
Employing her trademark skill at honing detail and dialogue, Lively (Moon Tiger) delivers a vigorous new novel revolving around a house outside of London, the sprawling Edwardian homestead of Allersmead, and the family of six children who grew up there. By degrees-in shifting POVs and time periods cutting from the 1970s until the present-Lively introduces the prodigious Harper family. There's Alison, the frazzled matriarch, who married young and pregnant, and persuaded her historian husband to buy Allersmead; distracted father Charles, who writes recherche tomes in his study and can't remember what ages his children are; and the children, who range from the wayward eldest and mother's favorite, Paul, to the youngest, Clare, whose parentage involves a family secret concerning Ingrid, the Scandinavian au pair. Lively adeptly focuses on the second-oldest, Gina, a foreign journalist who planned her life to stay far away from home until, at age 39, fellow journalist Philip goads her to contemplate settling down for the first time. With its bountiful characters and exhaustive time traveling, Lively's vivisection of a nuclear family displays polished writing and fine character delineation. (Nov.) Copyright 2009 Reed Business Information.
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