Description
Book SynopsisCharlotte Mendelson's novels include
Daughters of Jerusalem,
When We Were Bad,
Almost English, and
The Exhibitionist. She has won both the Somerset Maugham Award and the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize, has been longlisted for the Man Booker, and has been longlisted and shortlisted for the Women's Prize for Fiction. She is also the author of one work of non-fiction,
Rhapsody in Green, and is the gardening correspondent for
The New Yorker. She lives in London.
Trade ReviewAs intelligent as it is funny. A beautifully observed literary comedy as well as a painfully accurate description of one big old family mess. A joy -- Viv Groskop * The Observer *
Fast-paced and engaging. Brilliant, touching and true -- Naomi Alderman, Women's Prize-winning author of
The PowerA dazzling portrait of a family in crisis * The Guardian *
A completely brilliant book. Breathtakingly good -- Barbara Trepido, bestselling author of
Brother of the More Famous JackAssured, inventive and entertaining . . . Brilliantly climactic . . . Intelligent and witty. The Rubin family may be a singular one but the delights and the difficulties its members have with sex and spirituality, food and domesticity, expectation and achievement, will have a universal appeal * The Sunday Telegraph *
Funny and emotionally true, this is a comedy with the warmest of hearts and the most deliciously subversive of agendas * Marie Claire *
Charlotte Mendelson’s
When We Were Bad will take its place among classic accounts of tribal misadventure with the same apparent effortlessness that proves so pleasurable in her writing. Rarely can readers of contemporary fiction feel themselves to be in such safe hands -- Hannah Betts * The Times *
Written with tremendous authority, insight, humour and even wisdom . . . Convincing and moving . . . Funny, absorbing and certain to linger in the imagination * Spectator *
Never has the perfect family cracked and crumbled with such elegance, warmth and humour -- Meg Rosoff, bestselling author of
How We Live NowRarely has the suffocating hold of family life been so powerfully portrayed as it has here . . . Mendelson’s great achievement is to make us care . . . Uncompromising and brave * Daily Mail *
With great delicacy and elliptical prose, Mendelson draws a subtle and compassionate picture of a family as it unravels. A novel about secrets and the damage they cause * Metro *
Compelling . . . A poignant and compassionate novel of a family in crisis as one member after another faces some home truths * Woman & Home *
Secret thoughts and unnameable hangups are teased out in glowing, metaphorical and often very funny prose . . . Mendelson explores the shadows and ghosts haunting a family which appears to outsiders to be a harmonious, messy, intellectual ideal * Times Literary Supplement *
Brilliant . . . highly entertaining -- Matthew Reisz * Independent *
Quite superlative * Scotsman *
Immensely funny and affecting . . . A novel that wittily and searingly explores the relationships between parents and their adult children . . . an elegant comedy of longing and survival * LA Times *
Astute, affectionately mocking prose and a wicked but merciful intelligence * Kirkus *
Absolutely spellbinding, so funny, so moving, so totally believable -- Jacqueline Wilson