Of all the contemporary novelists who are compared to Dickens, Susan Hill probably has the best claim....Hill has produced another perfectly controlled work of fiction... What is striking about the best of Hill's fiction...is her almost Bachian ability to plumb the depths of emotion and bring the reader back out again
- Amanda Craig, Prospect
Hill impresses without seeking to astonish, and so is one of those rare writers whose work is brilliant in the single, secondary sense- not glittering, but distinguished- her prose as pleasing and surprising, say, as a perfectly round stone, or home-cooked haute cuisine
- Ian Sansom, Guardian
Hill's writing here is superb, conveying emotion and pain in the sparest of prose...a comforting keenly moving tale of endurance and the eternal springs of friendship and love
- Philip Womack, Literary Review
It has a power beyond its pages; a haunting resonance between each stark sentence that stayed with me long after I'd turned the final page.The delicate balance between kindness and bitterness, hope and despair, a dying man and a dying town, are almost unbearably poignant. This is a short book that will live long in the memory
- Rebecca Armstrong, Independent on Sunday
Concisely captures primal emotions and offers astonishing transformations... Movingly perceptive
- David Grylls, Sunday Times
I read this short novel in one sitting; it is an enthralling story, touching and ultimately positive
Bookshelf
Susan Hill is the mistress of subtle atmosphere
Country Life
Moving study of faith and humanity
- Sara Keating, Sunday Business Post, Ireland
Beautiful novel
Sainsbury's Magazine
A bittersweet family drama set in an English industrial town
- Katie Owen, Sunday Telegraph
A transfixing parable of greed, goodness and an extraordinary miracle from the author of The Woman in Black.
Tommy Carr was a kind man; Eve had been able to tell that after half an hour of knowing him. There had never been a day when he had not shown her some small kindness and even after the tragic death of their young daughter, their relationship remained as strong as before. Grief takes its toll however, and it’s not surprising that by the following Christmas, Tommy is a shadow of his former self, with the look of death upon him.
But what happens next is entirely unexpected, not least for the kind man...
‘Haunting’ Daily Telegraph
‘Richly satisfying’ Independent