
Ripeness
Sarah Moss
£9.99
This book is scheduled to be published on 28/05/2026.
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Description
The perfect book club spring read from the Sunday Times bestselling author.
In 1960s Italy, a family secret rips a teenage girl’s world apart, only for her to discover its true meaning decades later.
‘Moss makes every moment count’ – The Sunday Times
‘A book of lasting pleasures’ – Eleanor Catton, Booker Prize-winning author of The Luminaries
‘Powerful and beautifully written’ – The Guardian
Just out of school and teetering on the brink of adulthood, Edith is sent alone to rural Italy. Her task is simple: support her sister Lydia, a brilliant but brittle ballet dancer, through the final weeks of her pregnancy. Once the baby is born, she is to make a phone call that will change all of their lives forever.
Decades later, Edith is living a contented life in Ireland, happily divorced and finally free. But with the arrival of an unexpected message, Edith must face the truth of that long-ago summer, and the secret she has carried for a lifetime.
‘Tender and rueful’ – Emma Donoghue, Booker Prize-shortlisted author of Room
‘A delicious novel’ – Literary Review
‘Sublime . . . glorious’ – Vogue
‘Luminous’ – Financial Times
‘Beautifully crafted . . . absorbing and moving’ – Daily Mail
Publisher Review
Sex and childbirth, emigrant and exile, the present and the past: Sarah Moss’s ambidextrous talent is evident on every page of this elegant novel. It is intelligent, but never disembodied; evocative, but never sentimental; honest, but never cruel. Ripeness is a book of tart and lasting pleasures — Eleanor Catton, Booker prize-winning author of The Luminaries and Birnam Wood This book felt to me like I was reading the achievement of a lifetime, written by one of the best writers alive. Moving, unexpected, masterful, it is a story of stories, of belonging, of exits and entrances, and everything in between. Moss’s understanding of who her characters are is also her understanding of all of us. A beautiful, powerful read that echoed for me long after — Jessie Burton, author of The Miniaturist Tender and rueful, Ripeness is a tale of being a foreigner that moves between 1960s Italy and 2020s Ireland, finding pain and bliss in both. Working at the height of her mature powers, Sarah Moss is a marvel of insight and eloquence — Emma Donoghue, author of Room Sarah Moss is one of the best writers working today, and this might be her best book yet. A wise and tender novel about birth, ballet and belonging, it captivated me completely — Bobby Palmer, author of Isaac and the Egg I devoured Ripeness, thrilling at the world Moss brings to life and the characters who inhabit it. What a delicious novel * Literary Review * The sublime author Sarah Moss returns with Ripeness . . . Glorious * Vogue * A luminous tale about borders, bodies and a sense of belonging — Thomas McMullan, Financial Times Impressive * The Independent * Sarah Moss is a master of the ticking clock. Her novels thrum with tension . . . as the climax rushes towards us, Moss makes every moment count * The Sunday Times * Beautifully crafted . . . absorbing and moving * Daily Mail * An extended meditation on what home or belonging might mean in a period of disruption and displacement . . . Moss perfectly judges the prickly absolutism of the younger Edith . . . unfailingly spare and alert . . . captivating * The Irish Times * Evocative . . . Immensely moving – and this story feels very much like life . . . This novel lingers so strongly in the mind * Harper’s Bazaar * A powerful and beautifully written story of family, friendship and identity * The Guardian * An expansive, expressive tale of family, history and ballet, this is illuminated by pin-sharp imagery and rueful self-awareness * Mail on Sunday * An insightful examination of family ties and belonging * The Economist * There’s no shortage of gifted writers who have never had a sniff of a major prize. The English novelist Sarah Moss, now based in Dublin, is such an obvious example of this . . . Moss’ new novel, Ripeness, might fix that * The Critic *
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