Review
'There's folk and fairy tale in this, some whimsy, some Angela Carter-style sensuality, combined with an earthy realism, and a thriller-style plot... Thompson's writing is, as ever, the kind that demands full attention - important details are embedded in lyrical description or insinuated into an apparently innocuous observation. This is not a book that is kind to readers - you have to buy into the world its author has created, accept its own very special laws - and that requires effort. But it's effort that is ultimately rewarded: I doubt you'll read another book quite like it this year.' The Scotsman '...The world she creates is claustrophobic and hypnotic, recognisably a dream but also rational on its own, admittedly skewed, terms... Many novelists bore readers to sleep. Wake up to The Falconer.' The Sunday Herald 'Thompson's writing is, as ever, the kind that demands full attention - important details are embedded in lyrical description or insinuated into an apparently innocuous observation ... I doubt you'll read another book quite like it this year.' THE SCOTSMAN Praise for Alice Thompson's previous novels:'Cunning, clever, unbelievably casually complex - this is it: the intellectual future of British writing.' Ali Smith, The Scotsman 'Elegantly spare ... radically different in plot, style and language ... Thompson is one of the more original and idiosyncratic new voices in fiction.' Patricia Nicol, Sunday Times 'Thompson writes with a detached clarity that is liquid and sensual.' Rosemary Goring, Scotland on Sunday '...the elegance and accuracy with which Thompson uses language is formidable.' THE INDEPENDENT
About the Author
The Falconer is critically-acclaimed author Alice Thompson's fourth novel. The former keyboard player with post-punk eighties band, the Woodentops, was joint winner with Graham Swift of the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction for her first novel, Justine. Her second novel, Pandora's Box, was shortlisted for The Stakis Prize for Scottish Writer of the Year. Alice is also a past winner of a Creative Scotland Award. She lives in Edinburgh.