Reviews
Destined to become a classic . . . Elegantly written and totally immersive, Quinn's debut is
a wonder
My
book of the year. I adored this
beautifully compulsive story with serious
Cazalet vibes. Wild and wilful Cristabel was
the perfect heroine
In classic English Country House novel style, [
The Whalebone Theatre] focuses on the younger generation amidst a backdrop of scandalous adult misbehaviour. This is
a chunky novel to get lost in, full of
pacy plotting and
luscious language
This is
a book that will be loved unreasonably and life-long
Utterly captivating ...
Written with great heart, humour and humanity, it's the kind of book you want to escape normal life to read at every available opportunity.
The Whalebone Theatre has all the makings of a classic. And Cristabel Seagrave is the most gratifying hero. The war scenes often left me breathless: they are as good as you will ever read.
A wonderful debut. Actually, a tour de force'
Breathes fresh, bracing air into the lungs of the multi-generational saga - and the very form of the novel itself. Few people writing today can match Quinn for the
energy and precision of her prose...
So immersive and joyous and glorious. I was completely entranced
Quinn creates a world
so rich with observation, detail, humanity and heart that you are incapable of doing anything but
drinking it in with greedy delight
Quinn's story passes like a fabulous pageant, richly coloured and packed with incident, taking us from the lonely and unorthodox Dorset childhood of the extraordinary Christabel to the poignant aftermath of her heroic Second World War
. Quinn has a sublime touch: Cristabel and her troupe are unforgettable, as riotous in comedy as they are heart-breaking in tragedy'
Magnificent. As capacious, surprising and magical as the whale that lends its bones to Cristabel's theatre: a tale of intertwined lives and braided fates as deftly managed and heartbreaking as a Dickens' novel.
I defy any reader not to fall in love... it transported me wholesale to another time and place and while I wandered its pages, I forgot the world for a while
A crumbling old country manor, three unconventional siblings and the looming threat of war makes for
a classic coming-of-age tale, as imaginative Cristabel, sweet Flossie and charismatic Digby attempt to find their roles in life.
Brimful of charm, and wonderfully immersive, this is a captivating read
Written with
heart and
humour
[A]
brilliant debut ... A
truly immersive read. The plot unfolds gradually, allowing you to really
connect with the characters, all of whom are very real with their fears and foibles ...
Fascinating
One of those
big chunky stories that
swallows you whole - and it's
beautifully written too
I was
swept away by this
compelling,
beautifully written debut and its
plucky heroine
The Whalebone Theatre is
absolute aces ... Quinn's imagination and adventuresome spirit are
a pleasure to behold
Utterly heart-breaking and joyous ... I just disappeared into THE WHALEBONE THEATRE and didn't want to leave
A pedigree stretching from
Charles Dickens to
Lemony Snicket ... What's
remarkable, especially for a first novel, is her
deft way of depicting this lost world - whether a subsiding seaside aristocracy or a training school for British agents or a Parisian theater in wartime - convincingly enough to let us see it simply as a setting for the unfolding drama.
Her vision is so fine and fully realized that it's
hard to imagine her doing anything else - and hard to have to wait to see what that might be
Quite simply brilliant ... The kind of story you
sink into, getting totally wrapped up in the characters and their world ...
The Whalebone Theatre is
a book to treasure
Far and away my favourite novel of the year ... A
gorgeous book, following the lives of three half-siblings from the '20s and through World War II, the same canvas Kate Atkinson has used to such great effect.
Love, grief and comedy in perfect balance: it's
hard to believe that this accomplished novel comes from a first-timer
Deservedly a surprise bestseller on both sides of the Atlantic ...
Absorbing the best parts of Kate Atkinson, Evelyn Waugh and Elizabeth Jane Howard, this is
a book to sink into and be propelled along by its
brilliant storytelling. Few debuts have been as
assured as this; Quinn is
a frighteningly talented writer
Elegantly written and
totally immersive. Helmed by
fierce, imaginative Cristabel, it follows the fate and fortune of the three Seagrave siblings as they stage a theatrical production in their crumbling Dorset manor, and cope with the darkness of World War II and the long shadow it casts over their
ramshackle, but golden, childhoods
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