Winter 1962. As Britain becomes engulfed in one the coldest and longest winters on record, the lives of two newly married couples are changed in surprising and irrevocable ways.
LONGLISTED FOR THE BOOKER PRIZE 2025Winner of the Walter Scott Prize for Historical FictionWinner of the Winston Graham Historical Prize 2025December 1962, the West Country.Local doctor Eric Parry, mulling secrets, sets out on his rounds, while his pregnant wife sleeps on in the warmth of their cottage. Across the field, funny, troubled Rita Simmons is also asleep, her head full of images of a past life her husband prefers to ignore. He's been up for hours, tending to the needs of the small dairy farm where he hoped to create a new version of himself, a project that's already faltering.
But when the ordinary cold of an English December gives way to violent blizzards, the two couples find their lives beginning to unravel.
Where do you hide when you can't leave home? And where, in a frozen world, can you run to?Details
ISBN13: 9781529354287
Format: Paperback / softback
Number of Pages: 384
Edition:
Publication Date: 29 Oct 2024
Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton
Publication City, Country: United Kingdom
Dimensions (cm): 23.2(H)x15.2(L)x3.6(W)460
Weight (gm): 460
Author Biography
Andrew Miller's first novel,
Ingenious Pain, was published by Sceptre in 1997. It won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize, the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award and the Grinzane Cavour Prize for the best foreign novel published in Italy. It has been followed by
Casanova,
Oxygen, which was shortlisted for the Booker Prize and the Whitbread Novel of the Year Award in 2001,
The Optimists,
One Morning Like a Bird,
Pure, which won the Costa Book of the Year Award in 2011,
The Crossing,
Now We Shall Be Entirely Free,
The Slowworm's Song and
The Land in Winter, which won the Winston Graham Historical Prize and the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction, and was longlisted for the Booker Prize in 2025. Andrew Miller's novels have been published in translation in twenty countries. Born in Bristol in 1960, he currently lives in Somerset.
Reviews
Tender, elegant, soulful and
perfect, also seismic. Cinematic at times, and at others painterly.
The Land in Winter is
a novel that hits your cells and can be felt there, without your brain really knowing what's happened to it.
Superb -- Samantha Harvey, Booker Prize-winning author of ORBITAL
A delicate and devastating novel . . . The novel captures in beautiful, thought-provoking style a vivid moment in England's past -- The 20 best books of the year * Independent *
Finally,
a recent publication that deserves the widest attention. Andrew Miller is known for acute and unnerving historical novels such as
Pure and
Ingenious Pain, but in
The Land in Winter, a study of two young marriages during England's 1962-3 Big Freeze,
he may have written his best book yet. The shadows of madness, and of the second world war, extend into a world on the cusp of enormous social change. Miller conjures his characters and their times with a subtle
brilliance that is not to be missed -- The best fiction of 2024 * Guardian *
Perfect -- Rachel Cooke * Observer *
Delicate and devastating . . .
a brilliant novel, but wrap your emotions up tight because Miller steers it expertly towards a desolate, distressing ending -- Martin Chilton * Independent *
A novel of
dazzling humanity and
captivating, crystalline prose -- Hephzibah Anderson * Mail on Sunday *
Miller is on superb form here as he portrays the everyday lives of country doctor Eric and farmer Bill and their respective wives, Irene and Rita, both of whom are expecting their first child. This is a story of conformity and conflict - against the elements, societal changes and the characters' sense of themselves. That inner turmoil is brilliantly crafted, and the depiction of the local asylum in particular is chilling in every sense * Observer *
This is a quiet book about quiet lives; internal turmoil trumping external drama. But the delicate attention Miller affords his characters' inner lives makes for
incredibly satisfying reading. Also notable is his elegant, measured prose . . .
You can sink into this novel as one would into freshly driven powdery snow -- Lucy Scholes * Financial Times *
Expertly layered and so acutely rendered it makes you shiver, this is a
breathtaking book from one of our most underrated novelists -- The 14 most underrated books of 2024 * i Newspaper *
The writing is
stunning and the details of the 1960s setting are particularly evocative.
Another psychologically rich novel from one of my favourite writers -- 20 best books of the year * Good Housekeeping *
Deeply evocative . . . a memorable slice of historical fiction * Daily Mail *
Psychologically acute . . . For 200
impeccable pages Miller gives us four intensely imagined inner lives . . . gripping * Times Literary Supplement *
This story of two marriages brilliantly evokes the legacy of the second world war.
Andrew Miller is a master of nuance, expert at exploring the various chambers of the human heart . . . For all its wintry setting and cold echoes of the past, and for all that it opens with a death in an asylum, this is not a bleak book. The people in it yearn and reach; they make mistakes, too - some of them terrible. But all the while, somehow, you feel - you hope - they might find a way through . . . In
The Land in Winter, Miller's characters have looked into the abyss. It makes the ordinary business of living at once very difficult and very necessary -- Rachel Seiffert * Guardian *
Beautifully done -- James Walton * The Times *
Moving . . . offers a full display of Miller's gifts . . . In the white violence of the winter terrain,
the narrator's voice wreaths around everything. That voice is the glory of The Land in Winter * Literary Review *
Intimate . . . The writing is
stunning and the details of the 1960s setting are particularly evocative.
Another psychologically rich novel from one of my favourite writers -- Joanne Finney * Good Housekeeping *
Miller works magic, bringing to life not just human relations, but the Sixties too, before they began to swing * Saga Magazine *
With each new novel, Andrew Miller revitalises the form and takes the reader to extraordinary new places. His work is truly exploratory, never still in its ambition or human dynamics. There's always immense sensuality, disquiet, drama and wisdom in his books, but
The Land in Winter is
outstandingly beautiful and immersive in its storytelling. It's disruptive and graceful beyond anything I've read or could hope to write. He is the novelists' lodestar -- Sarah Hall, author of BURNTCOAT
I loved The Land in Winter. I am in awe of the understanding, the grace and eloquence of it. I kept smiling to myself as I read with a kind of wonder at the sheer perception. The
insideness he seemed able to find and the idea that at some point, even the most conflicted ideas touch one another. There were moments I thought of Penelope Fitzgerald - that moment I have always loved in
The Beginning of Spring when the birch trees seem to grow hands - those liminal moments that are kind of beyond words, or explanation, but he finds them anyway. It's
a thing of rare beauty -- Rachel Joyce, author of THE UNLIKELY PILGRIMAGE OF HAROLD FRY
Sentence after sentence,
The Land in Winter is
beautifully intricate, deeply moving, and utterly absorbing -- Claire Fuller, author of UNSETTLED GROUND
I loved it from the first line.
The Land in Winter is going to be such an important book - one that we need now. The relentless dignity and vulnerability of ordinary work in the aftermath of horror - the eggs still need scrambling and the cows milking no matter what - and the rough and awkward work of love as part of the same picture feels
absolutely essential. It was
gently and startlingly beautiful -- Jenn Ashworth, author of GHOSTED
The Land in Winter is a
wondrous novel about the interior lives of the occupants of two marriages, set in the intensely realised physical world they inhabit. Andrew Miller's talent is to allow us into their world - into their houses and into their minds - so that we see them both as young marrieds in an English village in the coldest winter of the twentieth century and as souls passing through the snowstorms of time -- Tim Pears, author of The West Country Trilogy
A beautifully written, slow-burn portrait of a moment and place in time, it excavates the intricacies of the human heart -- Editor's Choice * The Bookseller *
[T]akes the delight that all great historical fiction does in putting together for us the pieces, small and large, of a lost world.
An exquisite achievement, luminously written, full of wonder at the diversity and strangeness of human experience. -- Francis Spufford, author of CAHOKIA JAZZ
Miller's tale of two young couples in the West Country who get snowed in during the big freeze of 1962-63 has
an uncanny beauty and depth [...] a novel that travels into the darkest places of history and the strangest corners of the human mind. -- Summer reading: the 50 hottest books to read now * The Guardian *
Set during the freezing winter of 1962, this
psychologically interior novel from
a master of the form centres on two married couples. . . who are forced to re-examine their lives when a blizzard cuts off their homes from the outside world. * The Telegraph *
[T]ravels deep into the hearts of its characters, two young married couples in the West Country. This novel has had my heart since it was published last November. . . it's
the best book yet from a stellar writer * The Guardian *