Description
Book SynopsisSummer of 1911. English society is on the brink of change. The streets of London ring with cheers for a new king''s coronation and the cries of increasingly violent suffragette protests.
Connie Callaway, fired up by the possibilities of independence, wants more than the conventional comforts of marriage. Spirited and courageous, she is determined to fight for ''the greatest cause the world has ever known''.
Will Maitland, the rising star of county cricket, is a man of traditional opinions. He is both intrigued and appalled by Connie''s outspokenness and her quest for self-fulfilment.
Their lives become inextricably entangled just as the outbreak of war drives them further apart. Buffeted and spun by choice and chance, Connie and Will struggle against the aftershocks of war and the changes it wreaks. This is a deeply affecting story of love against all the odds.
Trade ReviewPowerful and touching -- Clare Clark * Guardian *
Excellent and surprising... wonderfully rich... A
thoroughly absorbing and moving novel and
it is a testament to the author's adaptability and energy that he is equally at home writing about feminist civil rights, cricket, prisons, art and medicine.
And love. Especially love. A good all-rounder indeed -- Melissa Katsoulis * The Times *
An exhilarating love story * Sunday Telegraph *
What lights up
Half of the Human Race is not only the Suffragist movement in all its glory and lunacy, but Quinn's affection for his cast...
So often, historical fiction relies on research for its colour and depth of interest, but these are people who feel absorbingly real in their misunderstandings, jokes, troubles and passions...and this makes the novel equally interesting to both sexes
...moving... compelling... satisfying -- Amanda Craig * Daily Telegraph *
Quinn's
impeccable eye for detail, perfect pitch for the nuances of dialogue, and the
quiet, understated passion that enlivens his writing combine here to make his considerable achievement seem effortless...
The Rescue Man won prizes.
Half of the Human Race should follow in its footsteps and establish its author as
one of our most impressive novelists -- Peter Stanford * Independent *