Latest updates for Louise Doughty

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Recent items include:

  • Louise O’Neill: ‘I wanted to write the book that I’d like to have read in the early days of my break-up’
  • LISTEN: Irish author Louise O’Neill on fame, fiction and the cost of being watched
  • HOW TO CHEAT YOUR OWN DEATH

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independent.ie /1 month ago

Louise O’Neill: ‘I wanted to write the book that I’d like to have read in the early days of my break-up’

Growing up in Clonakilty in west Cork, Louise O’Neill had one dream as a young child: to be a famous actor.

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irishcentral.com /3 weeks ago

LISTEN: Irish author Louise O’Neill on fame, fiction and the cost of being watched

The Cork author says her new novel draws on the dark side of celebrity culture, from the early 2000s to the pressures still facing women online today

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kirkusreviews.com /1 month ago

HOW TO CHEAT YOUR OWN DEATH

Acclaimed painter Laura Adams is known for her solitary ways. So Annie is perplexed, and a little piqued, to learn that her mother has taken art student Felicity Rowe under her win...

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kirkusreviews.com /4 days ago

THE BODY IN THE KITCHEN GARDEN

Daphne Brewster has come to cherish the slow, soothing, picturesque corner of Norfolk, England, that includes Cranberry Farmhouse, her cottage; Pudding Corner, the village in which...

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irishcentral.com /1 month ago

LISTEN: Louise Nealon on family secrets and the pressure of a second novel

The "Snowflake" author opens up about buried truths, emotional silences and why Irish writing can ache with feeling.

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independent.co.uk /2 weeks ago

Elizabeth Strout: ‘I probably have one book left in me’

After Olive Kitteridge and Lucy Barton, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author is back with a brand new protagonist in her 11th novel, ‘The Things We Never Say’. The chronicler of small...

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theguardian.com /2 weeks ago

High and Low by Amanda Craig review – will Britain boil over?

A north London cafe is under siege in a state-of-the-nation satire that brings together the haves and have-notsBritain, muses trainee barrister Xan, was getting “hotter, crueller a...

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crimefictionlover.com /3 weeks ago

Interview: Louise Penny and Mellissa Fung

Canadian author Louise Penny (left) is at the top of the tree when it comes to crime fiction. Her novels featuring Quebec police detective Armand Gamache always rate highly when we...

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theguardian.com /2 weeks ago

The best recent crime and thrillers – review roundup

Honey by Imani Thompson; Quite Ugly One Evening by Chris Brookmyre; The Final Chapter by CB Everett; The Hollow Boys by Tariq Ashkanani; Shrink Solves Murder by Philippa PerryHoney...

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churchtimes.co.uk /1 month ago

Notebook: Claire Gilbert

Words of power “ALICE lived her life holding on to the sides”: one of Dorothy Parker’s many oh-so-cutting insults suddenly seemed to apply to me — or, rather, to my writing. My ex...

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dailymail.com /2 weeks ago

How Roald Dahl sparked a love for Stephen King in author Jane Flett

Jane Flett answers our burning questions, what is she reading, what book would she take to a desert island, what gave her the reading bug, and what left her cold?

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dailymail.com /2 weeks ago

Elizabeth Strout is back with a new novel: Read our review in this week's Literary Fiction along with Uprising by Tahmim...

Claire Allfree reviews the best new Literary Fiction out now.

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independent.ie /3 days ago

Joseph Birchall’s Darcy Doyle returns with twisty mystery as missing child case turns deadly

Fiction

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theguardian.com /1 month ago

Driftwood review – emotions dialled up to 11 in Trinidadian tale of longing

The Other Place, Stratford-upon-AvonA 1950s Port of Spain setting simmers with political change and family tension in Martina Laird’s debut playThe air hangs heavy in Alma, a drink...

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newyorker.com /1 month ago

“A Private View,” by Douglas Stuart

“Oh, not another story about me,” she cried. “Another book about how I was the world’s worst mother. I wish you could find something else to write about.”

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theguardian.com /3 weeks ago

The Given World by Melissa Harrison review – a stunning tale of rural life for an era of ecological crisis

Eerie omens haunt this absorbing group portrait set over six months in an English villageSitting stoned on a hill above his village, a young man muses on his place in the world. Co...

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theguardian.com /1 week ago

Kingfisher by Rozie Kelly audiobook review – smart reflections on love, desire and power

This heartfelt story of attraction and friendship, shortlisted for the Women’s prize for fiction, is sensitively read by Dan BottomleyThe debut novel from Rozie Kelly – shortlisted...

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csmonitor.com /1 month ago

Jayne Anne Phillips: ‘Writing words against the erasure of things and lives’

In “Small Town Girls,” Pulitzer Prize-winning author Jayne Anne Phillips taps her deep connection to West Virginia and the rural life that infuses her writing.

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kirkusreviews.com /1 month ago

THE LOVELY DARK

Eleanor Newton wasn’t able to be with her grandmother three years ago, when she died alone in the hospital during the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic. The loss lingers, especia...

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newsroom.co.nz /1 day ago

Short story winner of the $65K Ockham fiction prize

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theguardian.com /2 weeks ago

John of John by Douglas Stuart review – will a father and son come out to each other?

The Booker winner’s epic tale of gay love and loneliness in the Hebrides charts an uneasy homecoming against a backdrop of repressionThere’s a common greeting in the Outer Hebrides...

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oxfordmail.co.uk /1 week ago

Oxford author reveals the places that inspired famous crime writers

Christina Hardyment explores how the likes of Agatha Christie and Arthur Conan Doyle picked real locations for their novels.

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theguardian.com /1 week ago

Quartet in Autumn review – Samantha Harvey gives new life to Barbara Pym tale of imminent retirement

Arcola theatre, LondonThe 70s novel about the everyday grumbles of four office workers remains just as relevant, playfully staged by director Dominic DromgooleIt’s no wonder why Ba...

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theguardian.com /1 month ago

Death of an Ordinary Man by Sarah Perry audiobook review – an extraordinary chronicle of terminal illness

The author’s father-in-law died just nine days after his cancer diagnosis, inspiring this moving and sharply observed account of his last daysNovelist Sarah Perry’s memoir of her l...

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Sources covering Louise Doughty

crimefictionlover.com

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dailymail.co.uk

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independent.co.uk

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rss.csmonitor.com

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churchtimes.co.uk

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independent.ie

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