‘Creates a wonderful tension akin to that evoked by Daphne du Maurier‘s Rebecca’ – More
‘Carefully crafted and satisfying … will feel comfortable to fans of David Mitchell and Iain M Banks‘ – More
‘A quality similar to Emily Dickinson‘s poems’ – More
‘Reminiscent of Dick and Asimov, but also of Louis Sachar‘ – More
‘Mesmerising, mystical and captivating – a richness and depth mimetic of Margaret Atwood’ – More
‘Reminded me of Doris Lessing … though at the risk of committing a sacrilege, Morris is much more readable’ – More ‘Doris Lessing on a blind date with Franz Kafka’ – More
‘The spiritual charlatans of Hilary Mantel‘s Beyond Black … a romance and thriller like The Time Traveller’s Wife’ – More
‘This remarkable novel reminded me of The End of Mr. Y and Our Tragic Universe, by Scarlett Thomas.’ – More
‘Like Iain Banks … gritty, grave’ – More
‘The canny cultural observations of Barbara Pym or Penelope Fitzgerald‘ – More
‘Like John Fowles‘s The Magus‘ – More
‘Like Murakami‘s Hard-Boiled Wonderland‘ – More
‘Reminded me of Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro, but much more joyous’ – More
‘Reminiscent of Ursula K. le Guin or Sherri S. Tepper‘ – More
‘Distinct voice reminded me of The Handmaid’s Tale’ – More ‘A similar feel to Atwood‘s science fiction novels … but Morris is a writer in a class of her own – More
‘In the tradition of great old-school literary sci-fi like Atwood and Bradbury‘ – More
‘An ensouling fable in the great Bradbury tradition’ – More ‘I have not read speculative fiction of this calibre since Ray Bradbury was in his prime’ – More
‘Reminded me of Lois Lowry’s The Giver. It asks similar questions about individuality, memory, and the transformative power of love’ – More
‘Most beguiling – the author has something of Victoria Wood‘s funny bone in her DNA’ – More
Find my books
What’s my genre?
Read my blogs