Godwin

Mark Wolfe, a brilliant if self-thwarting technical writer, lives in Pittsburgh with his wife, Sushila, and their toddler daughter. His half-brother Geoff, born and raised in the UK, is a desperate young football agent. He pulls Mark across the ocean into a scheme to track down an elusive prospect known only as “Godwin” – an African teenager Geoff believes could be the next Messi.

Narrated in turn by Mark and his work colleague Lakesha Williams, the novel is both a tale of family and migration, and an international adventure story that implicates the brothers in the beauty and ugliness of football, the perils and promises of international business, and the dark history of transatlantic money-making.

Joseph O’Neill lives in New York and teaches at Bard College. He is the author of four novels, NETHERLAND which was developed as a feature by Sam Mendes and Christopher Hampton (longlisted for the Man Booker Prize 2008), THE DOG, THIS IS THE LIFE and THE BREEZES, as well as a memoir, BLOOD-DARK TRACK. His short stories have been published in the New Yorker and Harper’s, and his literary criticism has appeared in the Guardian, the New York Times, the Irish Times, the Atlantic, Granta and other publications.

A Woman’s Place is in the Kitchen

It’s a familiar trope: angry men berating each other in kitchens as pots furiously boil, sauces burn and a giant slab of beef rests in the background. The dominant view of a professional kitchen is one of chaos and pent-up fury – a gladiatorial contest of male ego. Why then do we also hear the misogynistic refrain that women ‘belong in the kitchen’ if, in a professional context, they’re all but erased from them?

A Woman’s Place is in the Kitchen is the story of Sally Abé’s rise to become an award-winning chef in the brutal world of restaurant kitchens; how a girl from the midlands who used to cook herself Smash to get by is now one of the most successful fine-dining chefs working today.

More than that, Sally’s story is also a stirring manifesto – drawing back the curtain on restaurant kitchens to show how she is endeavouring to change them for the better. Filled with stories of Michelin-starred food, the relentlessness of kitchens, as well as the hope for the future of the culinary landscape, Sally’s memoir is set to become a classic.

Sally Abé is a fine-dining chef at the top of her profession. She has worked in some of the best establishments in the UK, including Claridge’s and the Ledbury, and she retained a Michelin star at the Harwood Arms gastropub. She currently runs the Pem, named after the suffragette Emily Wilding Davison, which boasts a majority female staff in the kitchen. She is constantly working to get women into the hospitality industry and create fair, safe and happy living standards across the UK. She is represented for publishing by Rachel Neely at Mushens Entertainment.

There’s Nothing Wrong With Her

Vita Woods is on the brink. She produces a popular podcast and lives with her successful doctor boyfriend, Max, with whom the sex is great and the future promising. Her brilliant if unreliable sister Gracie is her best friend and sparring partner. And her steadfast goldfish, Whitney Houston, brightens even her dimmest days. Because the days are dark, as much as things are going right. Vita is not leaving the house. In fact, she can barely make it out of bed.

Instead, she spends long, blurred hours falling in and out of “The Pit,” dead to the world and to herself. For months, Vita has been sick with an illness that no doctor, not even Max, can diagnose. And recently, Luigi, a Renaissance poet nursing a 500-year-old heartbreak, has started showing up at her bedside, bringing snacks and unsolicited romantic advice. He says he’s come to release her. The issue he may be a ghost, an apparition of her sickly mind.

Then, when, an unexpected mix-up pushes her into the path of her upstairs neighbors, Vita finds friendship — and perhaps more — in the apartment above. But something about her “condition” keeps nagging at her. What if the problem is Vita herself? Because as far as anyone can prove…there’s nothing wrong with her.

Kate Weinberg was born in London. She studied English at Oxford and creative writing in East Anglia. She has worked as a slush pile reader, a bookshop assistant, a journalist and a ghost writer. THE TRUANTS was her first novel and published in 20219. Kate lives in London with her husband, her two children, and a tortoise called Agatha. She is represented for publishing by Claire Conrad at Janklow and Nesbit.

Alex vs Axel

Alex is a normal, everyday kid, living in a normal, everyday city. Axel is a monster-slaying hero, living in a world of magic. Unfortunately, when the two boys mysteriously swap places, each of them ends up being mistaken for the other.

With zero experience of heroism, Alex is thrust into an epic quest to defeat the evil Felonius Gloam, who has stolen the Book of Lifetales and is using it to unravel the very fabric of the world of Aërth.

Meanwhile, Axel is faced with double maths, a gran who’s six months behind on the rent, and a crucial chess tournament he’s got to win – when he doesn’t even know how to play.

Can the two boys complete their Impossible Quests and find a way back to their own lives, or will they both discover they don’t have a life to come back to . . . ?

Sam Copeland is an author, which has come as something of a surprise to him. He is from Manchester and now lives in London with two smelly cats, three smelly children and one relatively clean-smelling wife. He is the author of the bestselling CHARLIE CHANGES INTO A CHICKEN series (the first book of which was shortlisted for the Waterstones Children’s Book Prize) and is being adapted for TV, Uma and the Answer to Absolutely Everything and Greta and the Ghost Hunters. With Jenny Pearson, he has also written TUCHUS & TOPPS INVESTIGATE: THE UNDERPANTS OF CHAOS and TUCHUS & TOPPS INVESTIGATE: THE ATTACK OF THE ROBOT LIBRARIANS. Despite legal threats, he refuses to stop writing.

Clickbait

For over a decade, the Lancasters were celebrity royalty, with millions tuning in every week to watch their reality show, Living with the Lancasters.

But then an old video emerges of one of their legendary parties. Suddenly, they’re in the spotlight for all the wrong reasons: witnesses swore they’d seen missing teenager Bradley Wilcox leaving the Lancaster family home on the night of the party, but the video tells a different story

Now true crime investigator and YouTuber Tom Isaac is on the case. He’s determined to find out what really happened to Bradley – he just needs to read between the Lancasters’ lies . . .

Because when the cameras are always rolling, it won’t be long until someone cracks.

L.C. North studied psychology at university before pursuing a career in Public Relations. Her book club thrillers – THE UGLY TRUTH and CLICKBAIT – combine her love of psychology and her fascination with the celebrities in the public eye. When she’s not writing, she co-hosts the crime thriller podcast, IN SUSPENCE. She lives on the Suffolk borders with her family. L.C. North is the pen name of Lauren North. She is represented by publishing by Amanda Preston at LBA Books.

The Lost Love Songs of Boysie Singh

This is the tale of four women.

Popo: brilliant, vulnerable and stuck. She’s determined to free herself from the traps of her past.

Mana Lala: a devoted mother – her only connection to her man is their little boy, and she will do anything to keep them close. 

For Doris, well he’s glorious and once she’s licked him into shape, her husband presents an opportunity to climb the social ladder. She’s heard the awful stories, but she’s sure they won’t be hers.

Rosie just wants to mind her business, her lover, Etty, and her store.

Four lives, connected and controlled by one man: the notorious, charismatic gangster Boysie Singh. Pull up a chair and let these women tell of the man they believed could love, help or free them, and how some of them survived to tell a tale at all.

Ingrid Persaud was born in Trinidad. Her debut novel, LOVE AFTER LOVE, won the Costa First Novel Award 2020 and the Author’s Club Best First Novel Award 2021. She also won the BBC National Short Story Award in 2018 and the Commonwealth Short Story Prize in 2017. She read law at the LSE and was an academic before studying fine art at Goldsmiths and Central Saint Martins. Her writing has appeared in several newspapers and magazines, including Granta, Prospect, Five Dials, the Guardian and National Geographic. She is represented for publishing by Zoe Waldie at RCW Literary Agency.

The Spoiled Heart

Nayan Olak keeps seeing Helen Fletcher around town and on his daily run out to the Peaks. She’s come back to the old house at the end of the lane, with her teenaged son, Brandon, though nobody seems to remember much about her. Some trouble at school, back in the day. A certain defensiveness. Nayan is powerfully drawn to her, though he doesn’t quite know why.

He hasn’t risked love since he lost his young family in a terrible accident twenty years before. All his energy has gone into work at the union, where he’s now running for the leadership against accomplished newcomer, Megha. It’s a huge moment for Nayan, the culmination of everything he believes. But as he grows closer to Helen, and to the possibility that their pasts may have been connected, much more is suddenly threatened than his chances of winning.

Sunjeev Sahota is the highly acclaimed author of OURS ARE THE STREETS, THE YEAR OF THE RUNAWAYS and CHINA ROOMS. THE YEAR OF THE RUNAWAYS was shortlisted for the 2015 Booker Prize and the International Dylan Thomas Prize, and won the Encore Prize, the South Bank Sky Arts Award, and the European Union Prize for Literature. CHINA ROOM was shortlisted for the Rathbones Folio Prize and longlisted for the 2021 Booker Prize, the RSL Ondaatje Prize and the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction. Sahota was chosen as one of the Granta Best of Young British Novelists 2013 and is a fellow of the RSL. He lives in Sheffield and teaches at Durham University. The Spoiled Heart is his fourth novel.

WHERE WATER LIES

An atmospheric tale of loss and second chances that weaves together the stories of two women, Eliza and Iris, whose past mistakes bring them to London, and specifically, to the Hampstead Ponds, where both swim each morning. Told in the present day with flashbacks to 1995 school years, there’s a strong YA element, and Iris’ story introduces an unexplored take on missing people and how they are found again.

How long would you let someone else’s secret control your life?

Eliza has lived two lives – one before she fell into an obsessive teenage friendship with twins Eric and Maggie, and the one after it was destroyed in a single afternoon.

To Eliza, Eric and Maggie were irreplaceable, so she hasn’t. Instead, drifting through life alone, she works as a teacher, living in an isolated cottage on the edge of Hampstead Heath, spending every morning diving into her memories as she swims in the Ponds – her guilt never far below the surface.

Twenty years might have passed, yet Eliza still can’t help searching for Maggie everywhere. Then one day she spots a woman who looks just like her. Eliza has spent half her life wondering what really happened that afternoon and if Maggie is back, will it help her finally get answers?

But memories are deceptive, like ripples on water. As the past and present collide, Eliza begins to wonder: will learning the truth set her free – or will it only drag her down deeper?

 

When she’s not writing fiction, Hilary Tailor runs a design consultancy, specialising in colour and trend forecasting. She has worked with adidas and Puma and sits on the Pantone View colour committee. Hilary was raised on the Wirral Peninsula and graduated from the Royal College of Art. Her debut novel, The Vanishing Tide, was published in 2022 and has thousands of five-star reviews. Where Water Lies is her second novel. Hilary is represented by Rebecca Ritchie at AM Heath.

THE WRONG CHILD

A propulsive thriller that has it all: families torn apart, a ticking clock and a complex and dynamic antagonist – all told through the prism of a woman’s fierce bond with her child, whatever the circumstance.

When Sarah’s 3-month-old baby, Max, is abducted, she and her husband, Jake, are plunged into their worst nightmare.

Sarah only took her eyes off him for a second, but that doesn’t stop her guilt. And Jake can’t hide his anger that their little boy went missing on her watch.

The police soon descend on Sarah’s home, starting a nationwide hunt for Max and his kidnapper. And it’s not long before Sarah realises that she is their prime suspect.

By contrast there are smiles and celebrations at a new-age caravan site in Lincolnshire, as baby Blaze is introduced to the Star family.

The enigmatic and beautiful Jenna and her partner Gary are delighted with the new addition to their family. He is their fourth child and a real object of delight to their eldest – fifteen-year-old Willow – who once again will have to step up and look after her new baby brother herself.

But trouble is brewing for the Star family…Willow is concerned by the desperate online appeals from Sarah and Jake; Max has neonatal diabetes and without regular treatment will die.

As baby “Blaze” becomes seriously ill*, Willow makes a shocking discovery.

What is the truth about her family? And how far will they go to hide their deadly secret?

 

Julia Crouch is the author of ten internationally published Domestic Noir novels: CuckooEvery Vow You BreakTarnishedThe Long FallHer Husband’s LoverThe New Mother, The Daughters, The Perfect Date, The Surprise Party and The Wrong Child. She has also written eleven plays and is developing a screenplay. She teaches for UEA, Faber Academy and the National Centre for Writing, and mentors writers trying to start, finish or polish a novel. Once a committed pantser, she is now an avid plotter.

M.J. Arlidge has worked in television for the last twenty years, specialising in high-end drama production, including prime-time crime serials Silent WitnessTornThe Little House and, most recently, the hit ITV show Innocent. In 2015 his audiobook exclusive Six Degrees of Assassination was a number-one bestseller. His debut thriller, Eeny Meeny, was the UK’s bestselling crime debut of 2014 and has been followed by ten more DI Helen Grace thrillers – all Sunday Times bestsellers.

My Fishing Life: A Story of the Sea

A transformative memoir about a woman who – dissatisfied with her desk job – drops the drudgery of life on land and finds freedom and strength on the sea, becoming one of the few women working in the fishing industry today.

Published today, by Robinson, Ashley’s book is both a rallying cry and a (funny) love letter to an oft misunderstood industry; it’s one woman’s unique story of boat, skipper, sea and catch ultimately becomes a transformative view of a world that impacts deeply on us all.

Ashley Mullenger had never planned to become a fisherman. A chance fishing trip – catching mackerel off the Norfolk coast – was the start of an obsession. One that resulted in a transformation from clean-cut office worker to commercial ‘Fisherman of the Year’, and proud working owner of two boats, Fairlass and Saoirse, alongside skipper Nigel.

This is a memoir of that journey, a life swept up in tides and elements, strength of mind and body, of old ways and new struggles. It’s about the bravery of crews, early mornings, weather-beaten characters and those that can sink pints as fast as they can haul pots. These coastal communities and age-old livelihoods are built on trust, courage and skill – but they are also fraying against politics, poverty and climate change. The reality of commercial fishing is rarely seen, but Ashley carries us across the waves and around the UK’s waters in vivid detail to show what is really happening at sea to land the fish on our plates.

 

Ashley Mullenger is a commercial fisherman working off the North Norfolk coast. She is one of the few women working in the industry and was named ‘Fisherman of the Year’ in 2022. Advocating for better representation and equality in the industry (only 2% of crew members are women), as well as raising awareness of issues the fishing communities are facing, she has built a following on social media: 10k Instagram followers and 6k on TikTok (with some videos viewed over 600k times). She shows daily life in fishing and encourages others to take up the profession.

Listen to Ashley on Women’s Hour here

Read about Ashley here and here Guardian