What Doesn't Kill Us

Ajay Close
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What Doesn't Kill Us

Ajay Close
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Found in: FICTION, General Fiction

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Overview

400 PAGESENGLISH

Promotional Details
  • Published date: Nov 29, 2024
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 400
  • Publisher: Saraband Ltd.
  • ISBN: 9781913393960
  • Dimensions: 5.0" W x 1.6" L x 7.8" H
Ajay Close grew up in the North of England and studied at Cambridge. She worked at Granta, a literary publishing house, before becoming a journalist and then a novelist. She is the author of six literary novels, of which her first, Official and Doubtful, was nominated for the Orange Prize (now known as the Women’s Prize). Her novels are pacy, page-turning, dealing with family and relationships under pressure and sometimes with a political edge, and can be read as thrillers.

A Times best new crime fiction pick

“Finely crafted, vividly detailed … reminiscent of [Pat] Barker … brusque, rebarbative, unsentimental … [and] wittily realized.” Times Literary Supplement

“Panoramic … the parallels with failures in today’s criminal justice system are unmissable in this uncompromising novel.” Times best new crime fiction February 2024

“This book is a must read. Ajay has a uniquely raw and authentic voice. She conjures up atmosphere like no other.” Maxine Peake

“Close transports us to the time and place beautifully, evoking all the sights, sounds, smells, and attitudes of Britain – and that part of Britain in particular … It is the depiction of the social mores of the time that makes this essential reading.” Alistair Braidwood, Snack Magazine

“An eye-opening read about womanhood and how some of the struggles of nearly 50 years ago are still present now.” Chloe Mullis, Buzz magazine

“Combines a gripping page-turner … with a wider, excoriating, examination of the misogyny, racism and extremism that continue to blight so many lives today … riveting, thought-provoking, with acutely observed and convincing characters … Close is such a talented writer that she prompts us to consider these issues as a by-product of the story; there are no lectures here, nor any conclusions but our own.” Edinburgh Reporter

“Stunning.” Catherine Taylor

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