Utterly, compulsively readable, [it] could be this award-winning young author's best novel yet.

<i>The Sunday Times</i>

A serious, distinctive and eminently readable story of faith and family; about the demands of the world and the desires of the individual.

<i>Independent on Sunday</i>

Ashworth's most confident work yet and one that strengthens her reputation as an author worth watching.

<i>Sunday Telegraph</i>

Se alle

A serious novel seriously engaged with big themes. It is also very funny.

Andrew Miller, author of PURE

It is rare to find a novel that is so complex, so damn clever and yet at once readable... a truly exceptional novel.

Helen Walsh, author of BRASS

Jenn Ashworth's <i>The Friday Gospels</i> will make a nicely unsettling poolside read. Brought up in a Mormon family, here she turns her fictional talents to the Church of Latter-day Saints, both its dark and its hilarious sides.

- Mary Beard, Summer Reads, Observer

Grim and comic in equal measures, this is an acutely observer account of growing up as a Latter-day Saint in Lancashire

Observer

Ashworth's darkly comic third novel concerns the unravelling of a close-knit Mormon family in Lancashire, and evolves into a sympathetic, forgiving and absorbing portrait of family life.

Daily Telegraph

It's Friday in the Leeke household, but this is no ordinary Friday and the Leekes are a little unusual: they are Lancastrian Mormons, and this evening their son Gary will return from 2 years as a missionary in Salt Lake City.

His mother is planning a celebratory dinner - with difficulty, since she's virtually housebound with an undiagnosed, embarrassing condition. What she doesn't realise is that the rest of the family - her meek husband, disturbed oldest son, and teenage daughter - have other plans for the evening, each involving drastic and irrevocable action.



As the narrative baton passes from one Leeke to the next, disaster inexorably looms. Except that nothing goes according to plan, and the outcome is as unexpected as it is shocking. Giving a fascinating insight into the Mormon way of life, this blackly funny tale of innocence betrayed shows the havoc religion can wreak.

Les mer

The tale of an English Mormon family and the day the cracks in their lives yawn into chasms, as savagely funny as it is tragic.

Utterly, compulsively readable, [it] could be this award-winning young author's best novel yet. - The Sunday Times

A serious, distinctive and eminently readable story of faith and family; about the demands of the world and the desires of the individual. - Independent on Sunday

Ashworth's most confident work yet and one that strengthens her reputation as an author worth watching. - Sunday Telegraph

A serious novel seriously engaged with big themes. It is also very funny. - Andrew Miller, author of PURE

It is rare to find a novel that is so complex, so damn clever and yet at once readable... a truly exceptional novel. - Helen Walsh, author of BRASS

Jenn Ashworth's The Friday Gospels will make a nicely unsettling poolside read. Brought up in a Mormon family, here she turns her fictional talents to the Church of Latter-day Saints, both its dark and its hilarious sides. - Observer - Mary Beard, Summer Reads

Grim and comic in equal measures, this is an acutely observer account of growing up as a Latter-day Saint in Lancashire - Observer

Ashworth's darkly comic third novel concerns the unravelling of a close-knit Mormon family in Lancashire, and evolves into a sympathetic, forgiving and absorbing portrait of family life. - Daily Telegraph
Les mer
The tale of an English Mormon family and the day the cracks in their lives yawn into chasms, as savagely funny as it is tragic.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781444707748
Publisert
2013
Utgiver
Hodder & Stoughton
Vekt
268 gr
Høyde
198 mm
Bredde
128 mm
Dybde
26 mm
Aldersnivå
00, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
336

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Jenn Ashworth is the author of the novels A Kind of Intimacy, which won a Betty Trask Award, Cold Light, The Friday Gospels, Fell and Ghosted: A Love Story, which was shortlisted for the Portico Prize. In 2011, she was featured on BBC Two's The Culture Show as one of the twelve Best New British Novelists. She has also written a memoir-in-essays, Notes Made While Falling, which was shortlisted for the Gordon Burn Prize. She lives in Lancashire and is a Professor of Writing at Lancaster University.