Campbell's entirely fresh reframing of <b>classic fairytales within modern experiences</b>...really got me thinking. The <b>perfect autumnal read</b> to curl up with.
Stylist
<b>razor-sharp critique of contemporary issues</b> and <b>deeply moving</b> short stories
Stylist
<b>quietly excellent</b>
Stylist
<i>The Beginning of the World in the Middle of the Night </i>is a <b>gem </b>of a book
Stylist
A <b>darkly clever, beautifully written and deliciously twisted collection</b> of modern fairy tales
- Sarra Manning, Red
<b>'dark, twisted fairy tales'</b>
- Kirsty Logan, The Herald
<b>Full of wonder</b>: <b>brilliantly imaginative, </b>with <b>dark, unsettling undercurrents</b> ... The characters <b>sparkle with a sense of the surreal</b>, but these outcasts, misfits and loners are <b>filled with hopes and dreams</b>, and are as believable as those in any true-life novel.
Psychologies
Interwoven with myth and fairy tale, these stories are <b>surprising, delightful, and by turns dangerous and joyful,</b> like walking through a mirror and discovering a world that you both recognise and have never seen before.
- Rachel Joyce, author of The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry,
'Campbell's fairy tales retain a <b>kaleidoscope </b>quality from the first to the last page...a reality coloured by our imagination in which we are as strong as we are vulnerable, as similar as we are different.' <i>Sanja Gligoric</i>
There are so many intriguing characters and situations to be enjoyed in <i>The Beginning of the World in the Middle of the Night</i>...<b>Jen Campbell is clearly a writer to watch</b>.
- Katy Goodwin-Bates, New Books magazine
<b>Visceral, sinister and yet strangely beguiling</b> ... her stories often explore characters, situations and settings caught in t<b>hat strange area between the known and the unfamiliar, between the normal and the 'monstrous'</b> ... Comparisons could be made to Angela Carter, but Campbell's stories have a quality completely their own; <b>haunting</b> in their imagery and <b>powerful </b>in their brevity.
- Carolyn Percy, Wales Art Review
Interesting and refreshing ... <b>an extremely enlightening read</b>
TN2 Magazine
Funny and poignant and unexpected. <b>A fable for our times.</b>
- Sarah Franklin,
<b>fantasy, magic, fairy tales, with a sprinkling of reality </b>
Irish Times
A story collection which manages to be <b>magical and sinister at the same time</b>
Kirsty Logan
Modern fairy tales of magic, outsiders and lost souls.
'A gem of a book ... deeply moving' Stylist
'A darkly clever, beautifully written and deliciously twisted collection of modern fairy tales' Red
'Campbell writes beautifully' Grazia
'These days, you can find anything you need at the click of a button.
That's why I bought her heart online.'
Spirits in jam jars, mini-apocalypses, animal hearts and side shows.
A girl runs a coffin hotel on a remote island.
A boy is worried his sister has two souls.
A couple are rewriting the history of the world.
And mermaids are on display at the local aquarium.
The Beginning of the World in the Middle of the Night is a collection of twelve haunting stories; modern fairy tales brimming with magic, outsiders and lost souls.
'What a book. It's so strange and magical and the writing is just beautiful. I loved it' Louise O'Neill
'Enchanting and illuminating' Carys Bray
'Like walking through a mirror' Rachel Joyce
'This book is full of character and magic, and I found myself mesmerised' Claire Fuller
'These stories are weaved together like silvery fishing nets. Like shimmering, jewel-bright worlds' Helen McClory
'Magical and sinister at the same time' Kirsty Logan
From the author of Weird Things Customers Say in Bookshops series and The Bookshop Book.
'Full of character and magic. I found myself mesmerised.'
Claire Fuller
Stories of family and magic, lost souls and superstition.
Spirits in jam jars, mini-apocalypses, animal hearts and side shows.
Mermaids are on display at the local aquarium.
A girl runs a coffin hotel on a remote island.
And a couple are rewriting the history of the world in the middle of the night.
'Interwoven with myth and fairy tale, these stories are surprising, delightful, by turns dangerous and joyful, like walking through a mirror' Rachel Joyce
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