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The Midnight Library was named a bestseller by The New York Times bestseller, [6] The Boston Globe, [7] and The Washington Post. [8] Good Morning America selected it as a Book Club Pick. [9] Booklist [10] and BookPage [11] gave the book a starred review. The Book Reporter [12] and The Arts Desk [13] raved about it.
The Midnight Library by Matt Haig; Love After Love by Ingrid Persaud; Fifty-Fifty by Steve Cavanagh; This Lovely City by Louise Hare; Small Pleasures by Clare Chambers; Love in Colour: Mythical Tales from Around the World, Retold by Bolu Babalola; The Devil and the Dark Water by Stuart Turton; Book Written By a Guest. Sex Power Money by Sara Pascoe
On Mar 19, 2021, Emily Bowels, writing for the Library Journal, gave much praise to the book. Bowels went on to state that "Howell [...] has written a book that could be read in tandem with The Midnight Library by Matt Haig." The overall final verdict of the book given by Bowels was "Bold, raw, and powerful, Howell’s book--which also draws ...
Haig at Foyle's Bookstore, London, February 2016. Haig is the author of both fiction and non-fiction for children and adults. [5] His work of non-fiction, Reasons to Stay Alive, was a number one Sunday Times bestseller and was in the UK top 10 for 46 weeks.
Midnight was Dean Koontz's first No. 1 hardcover on the New York Times bestseller list. [1] Midnight includes a mixture of plots from the 1950s film Invasion of the Body Snatchers and H.G. Wells' tale The Island of Dr. Moreau. Koontz mentions both of these later in the novel. [2]
The Midnight Gang is a children's book written by David Walliams and illustrated by Tony Ross.It was released by HarperCollins on 3 November 2016. The story follows a boy called Thomas "Tom" Charper going to a cruel hospital and joining a "midnight gang" consisting of the facility's other children and staff.
The Radleys received a starred review from Publishers Weekly, [1] as well as positive reviews from the Associated Press, [2] The Guardian, [3] Library Journal, [4] Parade, [5] Entertainment Weekly, [6] USA Today, [7] The New York Times, [8] Newsday, [9] The Dallas Morning News, [2] and Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. [10]
She has lived in Brecon Beacons National Park in Wales, where The Winter Witch takes place, and spent six years in central London near Fitzroy Square, where The Midnight Witch is set in seventeenth-century England. Elizabeth Anne Hawksmith, the main character of The Witch's Daughter, lived in Brackston's hometown of Dorset. [8] [9] [6]