- Published: 31 August 2006
- ISBN: 9781846576201
- Imprint: Vintage Digital
- Format: Audio Download
- Length: 6 hr 9 min
- Narrator: Alex Jennings
- RRP: $11.99
A Spot of Bother
- Published: 31 August 2006
- ISBN: 9781846576201
- Imprint: Vintage Digital
- Format: Audio Download
- Length: 6 hr 9 min
- Narrator: Alex Jennings
- RRP: $11.99
Haddon's style is a reader's bliss. He writes seamless prose. The words are melted into meaning... Haddon's gift is to make us look at ourselves when we think we're looking away, being entertained
Tom Adair, Scotsman
This is a masterful novel in which Haddon has surpassed his previous achievement. He pulls off the extraordinary trick of being simultaneously riotously funny, profoundly insightful and deeply poignant... Painted on a small canvas, Haddon has written beautifully about the messiness of life with a poise and grit that few novelists truly possess. Fans of Curious Incident can rest assured that they won't be disappointed
Julie Wheelwright, Scotland on Sunday
An antidote to cynicism.... Haddon floats insights - sculpted, delicate and precise as origami - on currents of offbeat wit... you don't know whether to laugh or cry at the waywardness of the human spirit, you are salved by the compassion and humour of the tale. The delight is in the detail
Jennie Renton, Sunday Herald
Succinct chapters, replete with horror, humour and the minutiae of everyday life
Eithne Farry, Daily Mail
Amusing and brisk and charming
Patrick Ness, Guardian
Wry, warm-hearted and entertaining
Charlotte Moore, Telegraph
It has already been repeat-snubbed by this year's Man Booker judges. They've made a mistake. A Spot of Bother may be a novel about a humdrum family living in Peterborough, told in the third person this time, in deliberately ordinary language. Yet there is more real linguistic artistry, not to mention human empathy, at work, here than in all those poetic prosemongers, the Ondaatjes and the Banvilles... A Spot of Bother is a novel of minor incidents but it tackles big problems
David Sexton, Evening Standard
A delightfully dry comedy
Max Davidson, Mail on Sunday
A painful, funny, humane, novel: beautifully written, addictively readable and so confident
The Times