Praise for The Shore
Nominated for the 2015 Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction
Amazon Best Book of the Month
Longlisted for the Guardian First Book Award
"A multigenerational novel of entwined families, The Shore bursts with energy and ambition."—New York Times Book Review
“A vivid exploration of the struggle for autonomy and the many meanings of what we call home.” —Eimear McBride, author of A Girl Is a Half-formed Thing
‘Blisteringly good on systemic male violence against women…lively, compelling. It’s a great book.’ —Sarah Waters, author of The Paying Guests
“I loved this book. Redemption and revenge thread through these tales of lives at the margins. Epic in breadth but glittering in its detail, The Shore is utterly absorbing.”—Catherine O’Flynn, author of What Was Lost
“Sara Taylor has a completely natural, unforced feel for language and voice: a remarkable debut.”—Adam Thorpe, author of Ulverton
“This is not a novel for the faint-hearted but dare to read it for the sinuous fluency of the writing.”—Maureen Duffy
"Haunting...Taylor weaves hypnotic yarns of abuse and murder, of protection and redemption...An affecting meditation on lives which are inextricably bound to the land from which they've sprung."—Bustle
"This searing debut novel…offers a promising new voice. Taylor excels at imagining outsider identities, female strength, the connection of people to place, and a world so perilous that damage and healing, brutality and resourcefulness merge.”—Publishers Weekly
"[With] a deep-rooted sense of place...The closed ecosystem of The Shore provides Taylor with an ideal setting for illuminating the course of Life over Time."—Kirkus Reviews
"An intricate, intelligent, passionate work that does not so much storm the barricades of speculative fiction as quietly subvert our expectations of what speculative fiction might be capable of... The Shore is a novel to treasure. Flawlessly written and endlessly captivating, this is the kind of book that, like a well-thumbed family album, can be endlessly re-imagined and reinterpreted, that will retain its power to enchant throughout numerous encounters."—Strange Horizons
“[Taylor] can do dark realism as well as she can the magic kind – in fact, she seems able to do most things. This debut is a testament to an exuberant talent and an original, fearless sensibility. It’s also enormous fun to read.”—The Guardian (UK)
“[A] remarkable first novel…Taylor is a terrific storyteller with a flawless narrative voice and, as a portrait of the impoverished rural South, this novel is a real achievement. .. The Shore is a mesmerizing, powerful read."—The Times (UK)
“Reminiscent of David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas and just as ambitious.” —Stylist
“A collection of interweaving stories set on the coast of Virginia…[The Shore] promises lyrical writing and quietly tragic storytelling.”—Huffington Post (UK)
"Outstanding…[The] show-stopper of a start is followed by twelve interlinked narratives which hop around more than two and a half centuries. Taylor cannot be faulted for exciting subject matter…Taylor has a flair for prose which brings her dramatic scenarios to life. Mostly her description is understated, fleshed out every so often with imaginative tropes. She is also blessed with an effortlessly intimate and engaging narrative voice…A tremendous debut novel featuring writing which is unusually evocative, often hauntingly so. The prospect of more to come from Taylor is exciting."--Independent on Sunday (UK)
"[An] impressive debut."--Sunday Times (UK)
"This ambitious and magical novel is made all the more remarkable by its muscular prose redolent with atmosphere."-- Daily Mail (UK)
"Taylor’s prose is dreamy and surprisingly playful."--Sunday Express (UK)
"Steel yourself for The Shore, a debut novel which follows two families over a century and a half…Taylor is a beautiful writer, exceptionally talented in fact, and brings us lyrically into the hearts of each of her many characters."--Irish Independent
“An audacious debut…Brilliantly imagined.”—Irish Times
"A startling debut…This brutal, compelling novel uses the harshness of such landscape, marked by that relentless clash between ocean and shore, to explore and make sense of inner and far more damaged territories…The first chapter, Target Practice, gets proceedings underway in fine style, with an intriguing plot, assured narrative voice, a great opening hook and an explosive finale…Sara Taylor is a precocious talent…She seems set for a stellar literary career."--Irish Examiner