Ordinary People by Diana Evans - ISBN: 9781784707248
Paperback
Love, loss, parenthood: ordinary lives, extraordinary reckoning, unforgettable London soundtrack.

Ordinary People

Shortlisted for the Women's Prize for Fiction 2019

$32.76

  • Paperback

    352 pages

  • Release Date

    7 March 2019

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Summary

WINNER OF THE SOUTH BANK SKY ARTS AWARD

“I am shouting from the rooftops to anyone who will listen about this book. It’s so so good - realistic and funny and so truthful it almost winded me” Dolly Alderton

Two couples find themselves at a moment of reckoning. Melissa has a new baby and doesn’t want to let it change her. Damian has lost his father and intends not to let it get to him. Michael is still in love with Melissa but can’t quite get close enough to her…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781784707248
ISBN-10:1784707244
Author:Diana Evans
Publisher:Vintage Publishing
Imprint:Vintage
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:352
Release Date:7 March 2019
Weight:295g
Dimensions:198mm x 129mm x 22mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

Diana Evans is a lyrical and glorious writer; a precise poet of the human heart

Ordinary People offers a unique insight into the complexities and the challenges of modern life, identity and that lovely little thing we call love. From the moment I started to read it I was absolutely gripped - that’s how good it is. It is a beautifully crafted, honest exploration of how relationships are forged and deconstructed, and how the everyday and the remarkable can exist side by side. * Benjamin Zephaniah, South Bank Sky Arts Awards 2019 * I’m currently very much enjoying Diana Evans’s novel Ordinary People, which takes a forensic look at the pleasures and perils of marriage and parenting and modern London living – Sarah Waters * Guardian, Best Summer Books * One of the very many things that makes this book exceptional is the even-handed sympathy and unflinching fidelity with which Evans charts the changing weather both of her protagonists’ emotions and family life. She excels at dialogue and she’s also a soulful lyrical chronicler of London in all its moods and guises * Daily Mail * Evans gives us romance going cold with just as pitiless a precision as Flaubert in Madame Bovary… Evans’s prose is magnificent: it’s as if she measured each sentence, trimmed the excess weight, then fitted it into place * Daily Telegraph * Achieves a moody, velvety atmosphere, as though events were unfolding under amber-tinted bulbs…offers a precise sketch of the British black middle class, with a daring fifth-act twist – Katy Waldman * New Yorker * Diana Evans’s fiction is emotionally intelligent, dark, funny, moving. The sheer energy in her novels is enthralling. A brilliant craftswoman, a master of the form, she makes the reader ask important questions of themselves and makes them laugh at the same time – Jackie Kay It could easily be reimagined for the screen, though the film would not capture the sheer energy and effervescence of Evans’s funny, sad, magnificent prose * Guardian * Ordinary People…is very insightful… a detailed, well observed description of modern marriage – David Nicholls * Good Housekeeping * Thoughtful and intelligently observed… Evans’s delicate prose weaves issues of racial identity and politics into the narrative so that they never feel heavy-handed…a deftly observed, elegiac portrayal of modern marriage, and the private - often painful - quest for identity and fulfilment in all its various guises * Observer * Diana Evans is a lyrical and glorious writer; a precise poet of the human heart – Naomi Alderman, author of The Power

About The Author

Diana Evans

Diana Evans is a British author of Nigerian and English descent. Her bestselling novel, 26a, won the inaugural Orange Award for New Writers and the British Book Awards deciBel Writer of the Year prize. It was also shortlisted for the Whitbread First Novel, the Guardian First Book, the Commonwealth Best First Book and the Times/Southbank Show Breakthrough awards, and longlisted for the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award. Her second novel, The Wonder, is currently under option for TV dramatisation. She is a former dancer, and as a journalist and critic has contributed to among others Marie Claire, the Independent, the Guardian, the Observer, The Times, the Telegraph, Financial Times and Harper’s Bazaar. Ordinary People is her third novel, and received an Arts Council England Grants for the Arts Award. She lives in London.

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