All the Little Bird-Hearts
"A poetic debut which masterfully intertwines themes of familial love, friendship, class, prejudice and trauma with psychological acuity and wit." ─ The 2023 Booker Prize Judges
I lived for and loved a bird-heart that summer; I only knew it afterwards.
Sunday Forrester does things more carefully than most people. On certain days, she must eat only white food; she drinks only carbonated beverages; she avoids clocks. It's 1988, before autism was widely diagnosed. Sunday has an old etiquette handbook that guides her through confusing social situations, and to escape, she turns to her treasury of Sicilian folklore. The one thing very much out of her control is Dolly, her clever, headstrong teenage daughter, now on the cusp of leaving their home in the Lake District of England.
When the glamourous Vita and Rollo move in next door, the couple disarm Sunday with their charm, and proceed to deliciously break just about every rule in Sunday's book. Soon they are spending loads of time together, and Sunday feels acknowledged like never before. But underneath Vita and Rollo's allure lies something else, something darker. For Sunday has precisely what Vita has always wanted for herself: a daughter of her own.
A page-turning psychological drama, All the Little Bird-Hearts is an extraordinary, often witty glimpse into the mind of an autistic woman─and a remarkable debut by an author who is herself autistic. It is also an astute portrait of a woman coming to terms with the meaning of love, of motherhood, and of authenticity, and a poignant reminder about why accepting ourselves can be so freeing.
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--Maggie O'Farrell, National Book Critics Circle winner and New York Times bestselling author of Hamnet and The Marriage Portrait
"What a glorious, unforgettable character Vita is. And I loved Sunday's voice too, so unique, right from the off. It showed me things about autism that will stay with me. A genuinely valuable book, but more importantly I enjoyed being inside its world."
--Melissa Harrison, author of All Among the Barley
"Viktoria Lloyd-Barlow's is a distinct and poetic new voice. This novel about the complex desires behind our closest relationships is undercut with the darkness of Sicilian folklore: the fisherman who promises away his child; the lover who is a wolf; a caged magpie; burning fields."
--Clare Pollard, poet and author of Delphi
"Funny, lyrical, deft and devastating. Full of longing and love."
--Amy Sackville, author of Painter to the King
"Observations land with the startling yet welcome snap of good standup comedy. . .The result is a tightly focused story, set almost entirely in two neighboring houses on a quiet street, that's also a gleeful skewering of social codes, a raw portrait of family life and a revealing account of neurodivergence. Sunday may shy away from attention, but Lloyd-Barlow makes her wary, vigilant and poetic voice the star in a mesmerizing debut."
--The Guardian --The Guardian
Five Stars."Superb. Wonderful. All the Little Bird-Hearts is a beautiful, bittersweet debut...sharply evocative of both motherhood and how British society treats people with disabilities. Throughout the novel, Lloyd-Barlow's prose sings, and has real acuteness of observation." --The Telegraph
"Lloyd-Barlow... succeeds in creating a tempest in a very small, provincial teapot... Lloyd-Barlow's narrator is... an effective, thoroughly human character in a thoughtful book."--Kirkus Review
"Lloyd-Barlow's portrayal of Sunday's contentment and confusions makes for a deeply humanizing representation of autism, and her prose is arrestingly sharp. This auspicious debut brims with quiet tragedies and lush emotional landscapes."--Publishers Weekly
"A motherhood story unlike any other, Lloyd-Barlow's 2023 Booker Prize-longlisted debut novel is a heartfelt, firsthand account of a neurodivergent mother's experiences of love, pain, and loss in a world that requires constant translation... an engrossing page-turner."--Booklist
"[A] tender debut novel."--Washington Post
"This is a clear-eyed and sometimes heart-breaking tale of family dynamics and relationships, of deceptions both deliberate and unconscious, and of the many ways in which familial ties and friendships often overlap, related by a narrator who will stay in your head well beyond the final page." --Boston Globe
"A captivating, skillfully written portrait."--Chicago Review of Books