Críticas:
Such a lovely read . . . An amazing story * Essex life * Achingly romantic and painfully real, [and] one of the best accounts of the mother-daughter bond that I have ever read -- Ruth Ware A captivating story throughout . . . Charmingly nostalgic . . . [and] an essential and important read * Literature Works * Don't miss! * Best Magazine * Cleverly crafted and beautifully written, this is a story to lose yourself in * The People * I loved everything about this book. The writing, the characters, the details through the decades and the story of a girl, Dido, who just wants to fit in * Secret Library Book Blog * A brilliant read * OK Magazine * A lovely story of bewilderment and belonging * Sunday Express, S Magazine * A powerful, nostalgic, beautiful book, whose characters will retain a small place in your heart even after you finished it -- Ronnie Turner Nostalgic, funny and charming * Stella magazine * A must-read * Independent * Tender and with a wince-inducing evocation of adolescence, you'll fall for the awkward Dido as surely as she falls for the boy next door * Sunday Mirror * Funny, poignant and absolutely brilliant -- Rachael Lucas, author of Wildflower Bay An enchanting, heartfelt and nostalgic read * Prima Magazine * A bittersweet delight. Perfectly captures the awkwardness and longing of those who don't quite fit in -- Sarra Manning, author of After the Last Dance and House of Secrets You're in for a treat with this one * Red Magazine * I bloody adored this perceptive, funny, unflinching novel about growing up, love, sex, mothers and everything -- Kate Eberlen, author of Miss You Heartfelt . . . A wonderful example of Spangles Lit * Daily Mail *
Reseña del editor:
Joanna Nadin's first novel for adults, The Queen of Bloody Everything, is about mothers, daughters and how we can make many choices in life but can't choose where we come from. As Edie Jones lies in a bed on the fourteenth floor of a Cambridge hospital, her adult daughter Dido tells their story, starting with the day that changed everything. That was the day Dido - aged exactly six years and twenty-seven days old - met the handsome Tom Trevelyan, his precocious sister, Harry, and their parents, Angela and David. The day Dido fell in love with a family completely different from her own. Because the Trevelyans were exactly the kind of family Dido dreamed of. They were normal.
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