A dazzling novel about modern love up against the confusing, sad aches of mental illness - with all its highs, lows, humour and misery.
Products specifications
Author
|
Meg Mason |
GBPPrice
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14.9900 |
I was making a list of all the people I wanted to send it to, until I realised that I wanted to send it to everyone I know\r\nAnn Patchett, author of The Dutch House\r\n\r\nJaw-droppingly funny, this is the kind of novel you will want to press into the hands of everyone you know. A masterclass on family, damage and the bonds of love: as soon as I finished it, I started again\r\nJessie Burton, author of The Confession\r\n\r\nPatrick Melrose meets Fleabag. Brilliant\r\nClare Chambers, author of Small Pleasures\r\n\r\nCompletely brilliant, I loved it. I think every girl and woman should read it\r\nGillian Anderson\r\n\r\nConsistently funny and sharp and dark: its wonderful\r\nCharlotte Mendelson, author of Almost English\r\n\r\nIt will shatter your heart, before mending it with infinite love. I will be pressing it into the hands of every reader I know\r\nPandora Sykes\r\n\r\nAn incredibly funny and devastating debut\r\nGuardian\r\n\r\nIve never read a novel about the impact of mental illness on the life of a woman, and those around her, like this. It is simply brilliant \r\nBookseller, Editors Choice\r\n\r\nHilarious and heartbreaking\r\nCosmopolitan\r\n\r\nI devoured this book, with all its humour and pain and cock-eyed hope\r\nJulie Cohen, author of Together\r\n\r\nBrutal, tender, funny. I am changed by this book\r\nMary Beth Keane, author of Ask Again, Yes\r\n\r\nNina Stibbe meets Fleabag\r\nDaily Express \r\n\r\nEveryone tells Martha Friel she is clever and beautiful, a brilliant writer who has been loved every day of her adult life by one man, her husband Patrick. A gift, her mother once said, not everybody gets.\r\n\r\nSo why is everything broken? Why is Martha - on the edge of 40 - friendless, practically jobless and so often sad? And why did Patrick decide to leave?\r\n\r\nMaybe she is just too sensitive, someone who finds it harder to be alive than most people. Or maybe - as she has long believed - there is something wrong with her. Something that broke when a little bomb went off in her brain, at 17, and left her changed in a way that no doctor or therapist has ever been able to explain.\r\n\r\nForced to return to her childhood home to live with her dysfunctional, bohemian parents (but without the help of her devoted, foul-mouthed sister Ingrid), Martha has one last chance to find out whether a life is ever too broken to fix - or whether, maybe, by starting over, she will get to write a better ending for herself.