From the author of Nightingale Point, longlisted for the Womens Prize for Fiction, comes a new thought-provoking and timely novel. The line between home and homelessness is extremely thin and filled with judgement, but These Streets turns a spotlight on the strength and resilience required to overcome physical and emotional adversity that never should have been yours in the first place.
Important and remarkable Bonnie Garmus, Lessons in ChemistryA brilliant book written with warmth and sensitivity that I recommend most highly. I loved it unreservedly My WeeklyA sharp, funny, wonderful writer Diana Evans, bestselling author of Ordinary People * Jess is a single mother to two teenage children, and although life can be tough shes just about keeping things together. But when her landlord asks her to move on, so he can sell the house theyre living in without warning, Jesss worries take on a whole new meaning. As Jess struggles to regain her footing, cracks begin to appear in other areas of her life, and suddenly she feels shes failing at everything. Her daughter Hazel is becoming more and more distant, her son Jacob is struggling to find where he fits in the world, and the menacing spectre of Jesss older brother, someone she cut out of her life years ago, begins to make his presence felt again. Jess knows shes the only one who can keep her family together, but how can she keep going when life keeps beating her back? Set on the streets of East London, These Streets is a searing and powerful novel that explores how we are meant to find our place in a world that is designed for only the privileged to succeed. Beautiful and honest, it is an essential story about living in Britain today. * Readers are giving These Streets five stars! Powerful and rewarding . . . Goldie tells a very good story with real care and craft. There will be much praise for this book, and deservedly so Reader review,A beautiful book about a normal family I absolutely loved it! Reader review