The Homemade God by Joyce, Rachel

£9.99

Author: Joyce, Rachel

Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945)

Published on 29 January 2026 by Transworld Publishers Ltd (Penguin (Transworld)) in the United Kingdom.

Paperback | 400 pages
197 x 129 x 30 | 278g

3 in stock

Description

Family is everything, even when it falls apart.

Discover the brand-new novel from the multi-million-copy bestselling author.

‘It made me laugh, it made me cry and I couldn’t put it down. If you are a fan of Maggie O’Farrell you must read this.’ – Louise Minchin, TV presenter and author of Isolation Island ‘Rachel Joyce is a masterful storyteller.’ – Sarah Winman, author of Still Life’The renowned artist – the emotionally starved children – what an inspired subject! Joyce writes with her trademark vitality and compassion and there is such colour here. So much at stake. I couldn’t put it down.’ – Esther Freud, author of Hideous Kinky and Mr Mac and Me’Lyrical, shrewd and, ultimately, as indecently satisfying as a four course Italian lunch. My life is a little emptier now it’s over.’ – Patrick Gale, author of A Place Called Winter’Sparkling and addictive … Rachel Joyce is so incredibly good and wise on families and siblings. I couldn’t love it more.’ – Harriet Evans, author of The Garden of Lost and Found‘A triumph of insight and empathy!’ – Clare Chambers, author of Small Pleasures’Joyce is a fearless explorer of emotional landscape.’ – Sunday Times’If only there were more novelists like Rachel Joyce’ – TelegraphThere is a heatwave across Europe.

Goose and his three sisters gather at the family’s house by Lake Orta in Piedmont, Italy. Their father, a famous artist, has recently remarried a much younger woman and decamped to Italy to finish his masterpiece. Now he is dead and there is no sign of a painting.

Although the siblings have always been close, as they search for answers over that summer, the things they learn – about themselves, their father and their new stepmother – will drive them apart before they can come to any kind of understanding of what their father’s legacy truly is.

Extraordinarily compelling, at heart this is a novel about sibling relationships and those hairline cracks that can appear within a family: what what happens when they splinter, and what it would take to mend them.