Available Formats
Clara & Olivia: 'A wonderful, eye-opening debut'. The Times
By (Author) Lucy Ashe
Oneworld Publications
Magpie
28th November 2023
7th September 2023
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Historical fiction
Ballet
Crime and mystery fiction
823.92
Paperback
352
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 26mm
Surely you would like to be immortalised in art, fixed forever in perfection Sadler's Wells, 1933. I would kill to dance like her. Disciplined and dedicated, Olivia is the perfect ballerina. But no matter how hard she works, she can never match identical twin Clara's charm. I would kill to be with her. As rehearsals intensify for the balletCopplia, the girls feel increasingly like they are being watched. And, as infatuation turns to obsession, everything begins to unravel.
'Clara & Olivia dances with historical details, with unease and atmosphere. You can feel the mist of the London canals, hear the ballet shoes touching the stage.'
-- Abigail Dean, author of * Girl A *This unsettling tale As the story follows the rehearsals for the ballet Coppelia, we receive a quick-fire education on how the ballet works and why it inspires obsession An original thriller with a crafty plot.
* Daily Mail *'This book was a joy to read from start to finish. Ashe's writing is razor-sharp with a lyrical edge to it, and there were times when I wished I could write just as well. Rich, mesmerising and compelling, Clara & Olivia heralds the arrival of a bright new voice in literary fiction. This one will have the cash registers ringing.'
-- Awais Khan, author of * No Honour *A spellbinding thriller, set against a fascinating background and so beautifully written.
-- Frances Quinn, author of * The Smallest Man *'Lucy has created a mesmerising atmosphere in her debut novel. This story is one of dreadful, delirious ambition as well as the relentless drive for perfection - both as a woman and a performer - that cannot be sustained. Every violent act is a protest against this paralysing perfection. Beautiful.'
-- Sally Oliver, author of * The Weight of Loss *'Vividly rich and full of depth,Clara & Oliviais a compellingly chilling work by a debut author who makes storytelling look easy. An expertly crafted filmic depiction of gritty twin leads desperate to succeed in these dark streets while harbouring even darker motivations. A novel that entraps you within its web of sinister secrets; I pirouetted from page to page desperate to know what happens. This book has everything and I will be recommending it to everybody.'
-- Ashley Hickson-Lovence, author * The 392 *'Clara and Oliviais a delight, a book that is at times historical fiction, at times a love story to ballet, and at times even a bit of a thrilling whodunit.'
-- BookbagQuite a debut, very assured and confident a wonderfully told story which will appeal to a wide range of people because of the interesting characters and a strong plot threaded throughout.
-- @emreadsthebooksAshe trained with the Royal Ballet School, and she is fascinating on the detail of the girls lives; on the pain and the bloodied feet that underpin the perfection of the dance, on, as Samuel says, this mad life you all live, always on the edge of pain and exhaustion. A wonderful, eye-opening debut.
* The Times *'Haunting and richly evocative,Clara & Oliviatakes the reader on a spell-binding journey through the 1930s London ballet scene, in which the beauty and elegance of the participants is the flip side of a destructive drive for perfection and darkly murderous obsessions. Lucy Ashes debut is absolutely en pointe.'
-- Lexie Elliott, author of * How to Kill Your Best Friend *'Lucy Ashes debut novel is a clever thriller set in a world which she knows so well, having trained at the Royal Ballet School and being a twin. Its a story of sisterly love, ambition, and obsession. I particularly liked the inclusion of real-life characters, such as Dame Ninette de Valois and Alicia Markova, and discovering Sadlers Wells really did have a well in it. The novel was written from several points of view, and while that can be a difficult format for the reader, it works as the characters are compelling. Take a bow, Ms Ashe.'
* Historical Novel Review *After training at the Royal Ballet School for eight years, Lucy Ashe decided to change career plans and go to university, where she read English Literature before becoming a teacher. Her poetry and short stories have been published in a number of literary journals and she was shortlisted for the 2020 Impress Prize for New Writers.