'Brilliant'
Daily Telegraph
'The book is exciting . . . a pleasure to be remembered'
Financial Times
At once a love story and a portrayal of innocence brutally curtailed, Josh Lawton charts the rites of passage of a young Cumbrian farm worker and keen fell runner - an exceptionally good man whose very integrity proves his undoing.
'With this novel, Melvyn Bragg has established his place in English letters to the extent that his Cumbria is as potent a literary region as Hardy's Wessex, Lawrence's Midlands and Housman's Shropshire'
New Statesman
Read MoreEvery scene is clear, every character immediately recognisable . . . brilliant - Daily TelegraphThe book is exciting . . . a pleasure to be remembered - Financial TimesIt has the lilt and inevitability of an old ballad . . . [He] skilfully portrays the friendships and antagonisms in rural Cumberland, a territory he has staked out as his own - The TimesWith this novel, Melvyn Bragg has established his place in English letters to the extent that his Cumbria is as potent a literary region as Hardy's Wessex, Lawrence's Midlands and Housman's Shropshire - New StatesmanBeautifully told . . .the story unfolds with admirable simplicity . . . even the most brutal and inarticulate characters somehow manage to engage our sympathies - SpectatorAn effortless writer. He never strains for effect, simply achieves it - Sunday TimesNothing is harder to convey in fiction than the idea of simple goodness without it appearing soppy or naive. But Melvyn Bragg succeeds. - Evening StandardAs he demonstrates yet again in Josh Lawton, Melvyn Bragg has a rare ability to communicate both happiness and goodness - Sunday Telegraph
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