Synopses & Reviews
Nathan Staples is a man in pain, consumed by loathing and love in roughly equal measures. Frustrated and appalled by his life and the way he lives it, he is sustained only by his passionate devotion to his estranged wife, Maura, and their teenage daughter, Mary -- whom he hasnt seen in fifteen years, and who thinks hes dead. When Nathan contrives to have Mary invited to the island where he lives in retreat, he sets in motion the possibility of telling her he is her father, and of becoming whole and complete and alive again.
The path to grace, though, is strewn with obstacles and challenges. The obsessive island dwellers are trying to cure themselves through trial by extremity while, over in London, Nathans editor, only friend, and one link with his literary career -- the brilliant, loyal, hopeless Jack -- is drinking himself into the ground. And Mary is torn emotionally between familial love for the two uncles who brought her up in loco parentis and the beginnings of a romantic, sexual life beyond.
With her new novel, A. L. Kennedy has written a work of something approaching genius -- its surface bright with turmoil and damage, its depths profound and turbulent. A brilliant examination of human frailty, cut through with bitter, helpless comedy and agonizing grief, Everything You Need is a novel about a man who has nothing, a man who will be healed only when he finds the lost grail he once held in his hands: the ability to give and receive love.
Review
"Kennedy is richly, boldly imaginative....Kennedy's complex, prickly, and uncompromising quest for an understanding of the life of the spirit draws her into dark waters, but she keeps a tenacious hold on warmer truths, too." Publishers Weekly
Review
"This woman is a profound writer. If you are at all interested in contemporary fiction, this is work you must not miss." Richard Ford, author of Independence Day
Review
"A writer rich in the humanity and warmth that seem at a premium in these bleak times." Salman Rushdie, author of The Satanic Verses
Review
"The question whether Nathan will tell [Mary that he is her father] is basically the only conflict in the tale, but it is strong enough to hold this engaging and sustaining novel together." Booklist
About the Author
A. L. Kennedy is thirty-five years old and lives in Glasgow. She has received many prizes for her work, including the Somerset Maugham Award, the Encore Award and the Saltire Scottish Book of the Year Award.