Nicolas Mathieu's Goncourt-winning <i>And Their Children After Them</i>, translated by William Rodarmor, <b>winningly wove people, place and time into a lyrical, almost-Lawrentian saga of left-behind France.</b>
- Boyd Tonkin, <i>Spectator</i>, Books of the Year,
<b>[A] page-turner of a novel . . . I couldn't put the book down</b>
New York Times Book Review
Mathieu won France's prestigious Goncourt prize for this <b>absorbing</b> Nineties narrative set in a French valley community left stranded by the decline of industry . . . <b>a multi-viewpoint panorama of thwarted aspirations, spiced with breathy sex scenes and nostalgic detail</b>
Mail on Sunday
<i>And Their Children After Them</i> . . . <b>finds space too for beauty, for tenderness, for hope </b>. . . you might think of a Ken Loach movie with a soundtrack by Bruce Springsteen . . . <b>an elegiac anthem</b>
Financial Times
The plot, involving drug dealing and simmering violence . . . <b>keeps you turning the pages</b>
Sunday Times
A <b>deeply felt</b> novel, filled with characters that demand the empathy of the reader . . . There are no villains in the book, but there is a deep sense of humanity in all its flaws. It's easy to see why <i>And Their Children After Them</i> won so many awards in its native France. It's <b>an exceptional portrait of youth, ennui and class divide</b>.
- John Boyne, Irish Times
Mathieu captures the vulnerability and awkwardness of adolescence with painful acuity . . . A <b>gritty, expansive coming-of-age novel</b> filled with sex and violence that manages to be <b>tender, even wryly hopeful</b>
Kirkus Reviews
Mathieu's <b>stunning</b>, bittersweet Prix Goncourt-winning English debut . . . <b>will enrapture readers</b> and appeal to fans of Édouard Louis.
Publishers Weekly
Described by this paper's reviewer as "a Ken Loach movie with a soundtrack by Bruce Springsteen", this <b>haunting</b> Prix Goncourt-winning novel is set in a post-industrial town in Lorraine, where the long decommissioned steel mill continues to loom over the inner lives of a younger generation heading falteringly towards adulthood.
Financial Times, Summer Reads
'<b>A masterly, far-reaching exploration</b> of a de-industrialized country which "treated its families like a minor footnote to society . . . <b><i>And Their Children After Them</i> invites comparison with the great naturalist and realist writers of the French nineteenth century.</b>
TLS
We've probably all read books and seen movies depicting Paris as the elegant and luxurious City of Light, but for a more nuanced study of the French capital, I would recommend Nicolas Mathieu's <i>And Their Children After Them</i>
The Gloss