From the acclaimed author of Ghost Wall, Summerwater is a devastating story told over twenty-four hours in the Scottish highlands, and a searing exploration of our capacity for both kinship and cruelty in these divided times.
Sarah Moss is the author of seven novels and a memoir of her year living in Iceland, Names for the Sea. Her most recent novel Ghost Wall was longlisted for the Women's Prize in 2019. Sarah was born in Glasgow and grew up in the north of England. After moving between Oxford, Canterbury, Reykjavik, West Cornwall and the Midlands, she now lives in Dublin where she teaches English Literature and Creative Writing at UCD.
Sharp, searching, thoroughly imagined, it is utterly of the moment,
placing its anxious human dots against a vast indifferent
landscape; with its wit and verve and beautiful organisation it
throws much contemporary writing into the shade!
*Hilary Mantel, Man Booker winning author of Wolf Hall*
Nothing escapes her sly humour and brilliant touch. Deft and
brimming with life, Summerwater is a novel of endless depth. A
masterpiece.
*Jessie Burton, author of The Miniaturist*
Moss’s ability to conjure up the fleeting and sometimes agonised
tenderness of family life is unmatched . . . there is an artfulness
to her writing so accomplished as to conceal itself.
*Melissa Harrison, Guardian*
Summerwater is a triumph and confirms Sarah Moss as one of the best
writers at work in Britain today.
*Fiona Mozley, author of Elmet*
Moss is a writer who can say more than most others in half the
space. Her latest, a haunting story of alienation set on a Scottish
campsite, is the summer’s most interesting read
*Independent*
Summerwater is a beautiful book, written with delicacy and grace,
yet with an undertow as dark as the Scottish loch by which its
characters are holidaying in ignorance of the tragedy to come. If
you are a huge fan of Moss's work, as I am, you will find yourself
parceling it out, to read a chapter a day, like a gift.
*Louise Doughty, author of Apple Tree Yard*
Suffused with fascination . . . this latest display of Moss’s
imaginative versatility shine[s] with intelligence
*The Times*
This novel - about crisis and isolation in its own ways - moved and
encouraged me in difficult times. Another deft, sensitive,
crystalline book by Sarah Moss; I loved it.
*Megan Hunter, author of The End We Start From*
A masterful and immerse exercise in tension; here are the many
conflicting voices of modern Britain in microcosm. Sarah Moss
reminds us that society is only ever two short steps away from
collapse.
*Benjamin Myers, author of The Offing*
For more than a decade, Sarah Moss has been crafting quiet, complex
novels that make an indelible impression on the reader. This is one
of her best, and most accessible, and should bring her work to a
wider audience.
*Irish Times*
I read this brilliant novel in one greedy gulp. Sarah Moss is an
acute observer of modern life and puts humanity on the page with
deep understanding and wit.
*Cathy Rentzenbrink, author of The Last Act of Love *
With delicate precision, Summerwater takes the moral and emotional
temperature of a whole society. It is matchless, too, in its
blending of steely insight with humour and compassion.
*Pankaj Mishra, author of The Age of Anger*
Moss is the most brilliant writer. She deserves to win all the
prizes.
*Joanna Trollope, author of City of Friends*
Moss has quietly, and it must be said remarkably quickly, been
putting out some of the most interesting and carefully sculpted
novels of recent years.
*Financial Times*
One of our very best contemporary novelists.
*Independent*
Moss’s star is firmly in the ascendant
*Guardian*
One of the finest contemporary writers working in Britain today
*Stylist*
A brilliant, confounding writer
*New Yorker*
A brilliant story of dysfunctional families
*The Times*
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