Enthralling, a joy to read ... immensely satisfying ... [it] is a novel to live in. By that I mean of course that it's one that enriches the reader's life. (
Allan Massie, Scotsman)
THE SOLDIER'S RETURN
'His masterpiece' Peter Kemp, Sunday Times' Books of the Year (
Peter Kemp, Sunday Times' Books of the Year)
Unsentimental, truthful and wonderful (
Beryl Bainbridge, Independent's Books of the Year)
An outstandingly good novel ... One of the best English novels of the last ten years ... utterly credible, utterly compelling and very enjoyable (
Allan Massie, Scotsman)
A SON OF WAR
A novel of remarkable power and grace ... his authenticity is astounding (
Roy Hattersley, The Times)
Shot through with blazing integrity and authenticity (
Val Hennessy, Daily Mail)
'He has laid the foundations for one of the finest literary sagas of post-war Britain.'
David Robson, Sunday Telegraph
(
David Robson, Sunday Telegraph)
Crossing the Lines is both richly detailed and extraordinarily poignant (
The Sunday Telegraph)
The story of Joe from the end of A SON OF WAR, aged 16 (1955), through to the end of his first year at Oxford (1959), crossing the lines between childhood and adulthood as well as crossing from working class small town Wigton to cosmpolitan, rarified Oxford and all that promises for the future. The main thread is his relationship with Rachel, the 15 yr old schoolgirl he starts going out with in secret for fear of her father's fury and ends up engaged to while at Oxford until she breaks it off, knowing that they are on different paths in life and she belongs in the old, Wigton one. The dramas are the stuff of ordinary, family life, but Joe's rites of passage through adolescence will resonate with many, as will the example he sets of the new, post-war generation - the first 'teenagers', rock and roll and Teddy Boys.