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  • Published: 1 May 2014
  • ISBN: 9781473511248
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: Audio Download
  • Length: 10 hr 49 min
  • Narrator: Daniel Weyman
  • RRP: $22.99

Fallout




Four young people in 1970s’ London fuelled by love, betrayal and creative ambition

**** As read on BBC Radio 4 Book at Bedtime ****

Luke is a young playwright: intense, magnetic and hungry for experience. Fleeing a disastrous upbringing in the North East he arrives in London and shares a flat with Paul, an aspiring producer, and beautiful, fiery Leigh.

The three of them set up a radical theatre company, their friendship forged in rehearsal rooms above pubs, candlelit power cuts, and smoky late-night parties, part of a thrilling new generation of writers, directors and rising voices.

When Nina, a fragile actress, strays towards their group, Luke recognises a damaged soul and the balance between the friends is threatened. Luke is torn between loyalty, desire and his own painful past, until everything he values, even the promise of the future, is in danger. Suddenly the fallout threatens to be immense.

A story of four young people in 1970s’ London fuelled by love, betrayal and creative ambition - now available as an audiobook.

  • Published: 1 May 2014
  • ISBN: 9781473511248
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: Audio Download
  • Length: 10 hr 49 min
  • Narrator: Daniel Weyman
  • RRP: $22.99

About the author

Sadie Jones

Sadie Jones is a novelist and screenwriter. Her first novel, The Outcast (‘Devastatingly good’, Daily Mail) won the Costa First Novel Award in 2008 and was shortlisted for the Orange Prize. It was also a Richard and Judy Summer Reads number one bestseller and adapted for BBC Television. Her second novel, Small Wars (‘Outstanding’, The Times; ‘One of the best books about the English at war ever’, Joel Morris), was published in 2009, and longlisted for the Orange Prize. Her third, in 2012, was The Uninvited Guests (‘A shimmering comedy of manners and disturbing commentary on class... a brilliant novel’, Ann Patchett) followed by Fallout in 2014 (‘Intoxicating and immersive’, The Sunday Times).

Also by Sadie Jones

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Praise for Fallout

An intoxicating and immersive read... It is a fraught and compelling novel; one that replays itself uncomfortably in the mind long after it is finished

Lucy Atkins, Sunday Times

Intense... Ms Jones is unflinching as she plots the course of fallout with no shelter, of wounded lives undone by desperation in love and art

Carmela Ciuraru, New York Times

Written with a precision and a level of descriptive subtlety that puts her up there with our foremost novelists. I can't help but feel that if she had been born Samuel Jones she would already be considered on a par with the Barneses and McEwans of this parish... Fallout is crafted with a pared-back delicacy and attention to detail that shows an author determined to do better with every sentence. And at the same time, there is an intensity of focus, a merciless yet empathetic gaze directed towards each of the main characters that ensures we care deeply about each of them

Elizabeth Day, Observer

Hugely enjoyable... Fallout is both deliciously gobble-able and carefully constructed... A thoroughly pleasurable read

Holly Williams, Independent on Sunday

An intelligent, pacy tale... Every summer needs a One Day-style read; this book is a contender for that crown

Anne Ashworth, The Times

Absorbing and romantic... Will drag you in and keep you there until the very last page

Mernie Gilmore, Daily Express

Life-enhancing and compelling

Di Speirs, Psychologies

An emotionally charged fourth novel from Jones

Glamour

Cements her reputation as a writer in the style of William Boyd: able to take on a variety of styles and mould them to her own voice

Viv Groskop, Red

Jones has artfully captured the era and the febrile atmosphere of London theatreland

Carla McKay, Daily Mail

Absorbing

Good Housekeeping

Fabulous period detail

Woman & Home

Even better than The Outcast

Natascha McElhone, Independent

Anyone who loved Sadie Jones' gripping debut novel The Outcast will be equally hooked by this fraught tale of creative ambition and betrayal in a radical theatre group of 1970s London

Stylist

Few people combine emotional intelligence with commercial appeal so well… Jones writes so richly it’s like sinking into a luxurious bath

Metro

A vivid sense of period is combined with a real satirical edge

Mail on Sunday

Jones gives the appearances of being an effortlessly fluent writer. Her sentences tumble forth, occasionally surprising the reader with their odd perfection… Sadie Jones is that rare novelist who can deliver a satisfying plot without stylistic compromise

Alex Peake-Tomkinson, Times Literary Supplement

The novel captures, better than anything I’ve read, theatre’s febrile, ephemeral intensity

Samantha Ellis, Big Issue

Now I want to read her other books

William Leith, Evening Standard

An irresistible read

John Koski, Daily Mail

A page-turning read. We can think of no more worthwhile or enjoyable companion on holiday

A Little Bird (Blog)

Sadie Jones depicts the dark undercurrents of middle-class life with unerring skill, telling a powerful and disturbing story with insight and depth

Good Book Guide