<b>A joyous new novel</b>… A life-affirming tale of late-flowering love… <b>if we manage to live a little longer, we might have the privilege of enjoying more novels such as this one</b>.
Sunday Times
Let’s pause to consider [Howard Jacobson’s] comic elegance and precision… <b>Just look at the way he makes the English language dance for us… the characters, as they converse, striking sparks off one another</b>.
Spectator
<b>Brilliantly obser</b><b>ved… No other novelist writing in Britain could dramatise this nonagenarian love story with greater verve and tenderness</b>, while never forgetting that this is a resplendently comedic form.
Observer
[Howard Jacobson] is not one to let the catastrophe of old age get in the way of a good laugh, or a surprisingly tender love story… <b>[<i>Live a Little</i> is] merrily bonkers</b>… <b>This book is alive. It pulses with warmth and intelligence</b>, and, unusually for a novel about old age, it has a lot of style.
The Times
<b>A master of the slightly dark comedy</b>… Jacobson brings this little pocket of North London to life superbly, and <b>his two ageing protagonists are wonderful creations, depicted with wit and compassion.</b>
Tatler
<b>A thoroughly enjoyable read</b>. For a literature snob and a language obsessive… <b>there is a lot to feast on</b>… for someone looking for an emotionally honest storyline, the book also delivers.
Independent
<b>Howard Jacobson is a rather rare bird among contemporary novelists</b>, for he devotes himself to what Arnold Bennett called the great cause of cheering us all up. So <b>one opens a new Jacobson novel in the expectation of pleasure</b>… Jacobson’s observations are <b>as acute and funny as ever</b>.
Scotsman
This is a soft-hearted novel, warm and optimistic… [with] nimble, chewy sentences… <b>there is writing to relish on every page.</b>
Daily Telegraph
<b>With effortless precision… [Jacobson’s] exceedingly funny and discursive prose style often belies more serious observations on life</b>… There are opportunities for humour, redemption and hope regardless of how close the end is.
Financial Times
A meander of a novel that nonetheless feels urgent… it’s<b> </b>rarely less than<b> bitterly funny</b> in its determination to face up to the obliteration that awaits us all.
Guardian