About the Author:
Esther Freud trained as an actress before writing her first novel Hideous Kinky, published in 1992. Hideous Kinky was shortlisted for the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize and made into a film starring Kate Winslet. In 1993 Esther Freud was named a Granta Best of Young British Novelist. She has since written seven other novels, including The Sea House, Love Falls and Lucky Break. She also writes stories, articles and travel pieces for newspapers and magazines, and teaches creative writing at the Faber Academy. Mr Mac and Me is the winner of the East Anglian Book Award for Fiction 2015. Esther Freud lives in London and Suffolk. www.estherfreud.co.uk @estherfreudrite
Review:
I was utterly absorbed in the language and the story and the world of it ... You know how it is when a writer draws into a place and you begin to feel it is more substantial than the one around you? That is how this book was for me. I truly loved it * Rachel Joyce, author of The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry * It's undoubtedly her most accomplished novel yet ... Freud is a modern literary rarity: a born storyteller, poetic but never overwrought; thoughtful but never showy * Alex O'Connell, The Times * A compelling tale beautifully told, Mr Mac & Me is as close to a perfect novel as anything I've read in a long time. I loved every page of it * Ann Patchett, author of Bel Canto * Mr Mac and Me is perhaps Freud's finest, most heartfelt book, written in shimmering prose * Herald * I loved and admired Mr Mac and Me more than I can say * Francis Wyndham * Esther Freud has a remarkable fluency of style ... Atmospheric and elegant * Tatler * This is an evocative, gentle rendering of an English village in wartime and a poignant portrait of life through a young enquiring boy's eyes * Daily Mail * An elegiac novel of art, war and friendship ... Since her first novel, Hideous Kinky (1992), Freud has created a series of convincing child narrators; without condescension or sentimentality, her novels capture painful transitions from innocence to experience ... Her fine evocation of Mackintosh's melancholy on the home front, expressed in his painstaking watercolours of local flowers, celebrates the power of art to outlast both man-made and natural disasters * Sunday Telegraph * Freud's novel is a tantalisingly oblique portrait of Mackintosh in his declining years, but also a personal story placed at the fulcrum of the era when commercialism replaced craftsmanship * Guardian * There's a quality of luminous wonder too, captured in Freud's delicate, lyrical prose and the tenderness and warmth of her depictions of the various characters that make up village life. But it is Thomas, mysterious Thomas, and brusque, beleaguered Mac, who glow in this compelling story of art, friendship and war * Independent * An absorbing, gripping, atmospheric novel of friendship and war, set in delightful Southwold and chiming with the First World War centenary * Evening Standard *
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