Rose Tremain famously eschews autobiographical material in her fiction, so this account of her childhood feels so fresh it stings… [she] brings her formidable talent for characterisation to bear on the vanished, culpable cast of her childhood
- Claire Lowdon, Sunday Times, **Books of the Year**
Rose Tremain manages to fit <b>more wisdom, more unforgettable scenes, more illuminating recollections</b>, into this 194-page memoir than other writers do in memoirs three times the length. <b>A book as nourishing, but concise as this</b> makes you wonder why other writers have to be so long-winded ... For anyone who loves Tremain's novels <b>this memoir is a vital companion</b>
- Ysenda Maxton Graham, The Times
<b>Intriguing and moving</b> ... So much more<b> alert and open and alive</b> than so many slightly disappointing memoirs by otherwise great writers ... <i>Rosie </i>is <b>a work of self-discovery in the best possible sense of the word</b> - it pulls you in, unsettles, comforts and exhilarates and, finally, <b>makes you see your life anew</b>
- Julie Myerson, The Spectator
Rose Tremain turns to non-fiction for the first time with this <b>lyrical account</b> of her life up to the age of 18 ... The evocation of 1950s schoolgirldom, with all its emotions, elations and smells, is <b>wonderfully vivid - distinctive</b>, like being donated a set of dreams ... A quiet drama, but as you'd expect it's <b>the writing that makes this book such a delight</b>
- Claire Harman, Evening Standard
<b>A beautifully written ode to the tenacity of our younger selves</b>
- Francesca Brown, Stylist
<b>This poignant memoir</b> ... <b>A telling portrait</b> of what went into the making of one of our most acclaimed novelists
- Fanny Blake, Woman & Home
The author uses <b>her considerable narrative skills</b> of set-up and delayed revelation to keep the reader <b>enthralled</b> ... Fans of her novels will know that Tremain has a <b>brilliant eye</b> for visual information, <b>vividly deployed</b> here
- John Walsh, The Sunday Times
<b>An evocative, unflinching memoir ... electric</b>
- Hephzibah Anderson, The Mail on Sunday
I was startled, but also very moved, by the almost abrasive directness of Rose Tremain's memoir <i>Rosie</i>. It did exactly what memoirs ought to do: made me want to rush straight back to her fiction
- Julie Myerson, The Observer
Compelling, moving and nostalgic in its evocation of a bygone era
- Charlotte Heathcote, Daily Express