<b>Kennedy tenderly anatomised London and loneliness in<i> Serious Sweet</i></b>.
- Ali Smith, Guardian, Book of the Year
<b>So beautiful that it makes your head hurt.</b>
- Katy Guest, Independent
<i>Serious Sweet</i> is <b>a magnificent novel</b>, showing Kennedy at the very top of her game. Ambitious in scope, daring in execution, full of dazzling apercus and dark comedy…<b> It is a tale of redemption, as serious and as sweet as you could wish for.</b>
- Rebecca Abrams, Financial Times
In equal measures, funny, sad and addictive… The opening pages had me holding my breath in fear and anticipation… <b>Capturing the relentless hustle of London life to perfection</b>.
- Glenda Marchant, Stylist
<b>A. L. Kennedy shakes her city until the right atoms collide. She stands back to give a picture of the whole of London on one day, and then suddenly swoops down to pick up a tiny detail.</b>
- Kate Saunders, The Times
<b>Deeply affecting</b>... Kennedy strips her characters emotionally bare… <i>Serious Sweet</i> <b>portrays intense lives of quiet desperation</b>: it is a novel about hope and muted courage and, at the end of the day, a very tentatively experienced optimism.
- Hannah Beckerman, Observer
A. L. Kennedy's eighth novel is a <b>profoundly moving</b>, often funny, and at points rending depiction of two good people. <i>Serious Sweet</i> is about the heroism of decency; albeit damaged decency... <b>Kennedy is not one of our finest writers simply because of the quality of her prose: she is because of the moral profundity of her work.</b>
- Stuart Kelly, Scotsman
This is <b>a bold, cinematic novel</b>... Parts of it are terrifically funny.
Herald
A <b>genuinely stirring love story</b>.
Mail on Sunday
Her flair for describing feelings and relationships makes this <b>an engaging window into the messy minds of Londoners</b> and her commentary on the city rings true.
- Susannah Butter, Evening Standard
LONGLISTED FOR THE MAN BOOKER PRIZE
Jon is 59 and divorced: a senior civil servant in Westminster who hates many of his colleagues and loathes his work, he is a good man in a bad world.
Meg is a bankrupt accountant – two words you don’t want in the same sentence, or anywhere near your CV. Living on Telegraph Hill, she can see London unfurl below her. Somewhere out there is safety.
As Jon and Meg navigate the sweet and serious heart of London – passing through 24 hours that will change them both for ever – they tell a very unusual, unbearably moving love story.
LONGLISTED FOR THE MAN BOOKER PRIZE
Jon is 59 and divorced: a senior civil servant in Westminster who hates many of his colleagues and loathes his work, he is a good man in a bad world.