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At the Table

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At the Table

By: Claire Powell
Narrated by: Kristin Atherton
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£5.99/mo after 3 months. Offer ends on 5 July 2026 at 11:59 BST. Cancel monthly.

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A 2022 BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR for THE TIMES, SUNDAY TIMES, DAILY TELEGRAPH, RED, GOOD HOUSEKEEPING AND CRITIC

'The kind of rare story you want to nosedive into on a hot hungover weekend and slurp down like iced coffee - cold, sweet and quenching . . . a summer read to devour with suncream and spilt rosé - and then lend to your mum or your daughter' The Times

'At the Table is a hugely intelligent, emotionally astute novel about family dynamics, and Claire Powell is an incredible new talent' Marian Keyes

'An assured, exquisitely drawn novel that fans of Sorrow And Bliss will adore' Sarra Manning, Red magazine

To Nicole and Jamie Maguire, their parents seem the ideal couple - a suburban double act, happily married for more than thirty years. So when Linda and Gerry announce that they've decided to separate, the news sends shockwaves through the siblings' lives, forcing them to confront their own expectations and desires.

Hardworking - and hard-drinking - Nicole pursues the ex she unceremoniously dumped six years ago, while people-pleasing Jamie fears he's sleepwalking into a marriage he doesn't actually want. But as the siblings grapple with the pressures of thirtysomething life, their parents struggle to protect the fragile façade of their own relationship, and the secrets they've both been keeping.

Set in 2018, Claire Powell's beautifully observed debut novel follows each member of the Maguire family over a tumultuous year of lunches, dinners and drinks, as old conflicts arise and relationships are re-evaluated. A gripping yet tender depiction of family dynamics, love and disillusionment, At the Table is about what it means to grow up - both as an individual, and as a family.

'Painfully funny, acutely well-observed, powerfully resonant in its humanity and emotional accuracy. I missed this book whenever I wasn't reading it' Luke Kennard

'A brilliant, coruscating depiction of dysfunctional family life. SO astute, on so many levels. I loved it' Hannah Beckerman
Family Life Fiction Genre Fiction Women's Fiction
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Critic reviews

A smart, readable and sharply contemporary debut, full of awkward family lunches and drunken weddings, darting between Camberwell flats, Soho bars and late-night Ubers
What sets At the Table apart is Powell's acute understanding not just of how we interact in the modern world...but the eternals of the human comedy: how people fool themselves, make excuses, get it wrong and keep trying anyway (John Self)
Powell is a fantastic writer who exercises perfect control. Every detail is forensically, sympathetically observed, and while there's a lot that's tragic, it's often very close to comedy (Wendy Holden)
The story's centre is Nicole - a spiky and charismatic woman struggling to get her life in order . . . Like Waller-Bridge's Fleabag and Rooney's Marianne, Nicole is her own woman: a complex and satisfying presence. At the Table is rich with delights (Erica Wagner)
Filled with razor-sharp dialogue and psychological acuity, At the Table is an astute debut novel about dysfunctional family life (Hannah Beckerman)
I have rarely seen the relationship between parents and their grown-up children so deftly exposed. I sat, at the end of it, startled, close to tears. It made me want to call my mother immediately (Sophie Heawood)
Claire Powell's great skill is to reveal to the reader what her characters struggle to realize themselves . . . Its themes are unremarkable - love, self-knowledge, the feeling everyone else is living while you are standing still . . . yet almost everything in it feels true (Claire Allfree)
At The Table is an assured, exquisitely drawn novel that fans of Sorrow And Bliss will adore (Sarra Manning)
Well-written, witty family drama
A beautifully-written novel about what keeps a family together and what tears it apart (Lissa Evans)
At the Table is a hugely intelligent, emotionally astute novel about family dynamics, and Claire Powell is an incredible new talent (Marian Keyes)
Painfully funny, acutely well-observed, powerfully resonant in its humanity and emotional accuracy. I missed this book whenever I wasn't reading it (Luke Kennard)
A lovely novel. I adored the precision with which these people are seen, and the exactness of the social setting. I found myself absorbed in them, caring about them, wanting them to do the right thing, and I was very sorry to leave them. It's a novel Elizabeth Taylor wouldn't wouldn't have minded writing, and there aren't enough of those around (Philip Hensher)
I loved this novel about a family. Each chapter has a meal (or drink, lots of drinks) and Claire Powell's writing and characters are funny and heartbreaking and moreish. I'm jealous of anyone who hasn't read it yet (Flynn Berry, author of Northern Spy)
Brilliantly clever and funny and sad (India Knight)
At the Table is an assured, exquisitely drawn read that has word-of-mouth bestseller written all over it
All stars
Most relevant
Brill characters all real and rounded. Can’t quite put my finger on why I enjoyed it so much. But maybe that’s the point. I’ll be watching out for this author xx

Loved it.

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This was a great book, lovely narration with very likeable characters. The story was never dull or slow which can be an issue with this type of story, loved it from beginning to end.

Life isn’t perfect

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Not a hugely compelling storyline but the book is kept enjoyable but the rounded and well developed characters

Enjoyable with rounded characters

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Initially difficult to relax into because of the flat narration and endless ‘says’ attributions which are unnecessary as the voices are varied and identifiable. The accents are harsh London, soft Irish or easy Received Pronunciation. Nicole is an interesting character but brash, rude, shouty and she jumps to sometimes sadly wrong conclusions. She seems very real. Her journey through the book is redemptive and ultimately satisfying. Her mother Linda is spiky, pitiful and awkward but totally understandable . Gerry the father is basically good and eventually honest. Nicole’s brother Jamie is tortured and unhappy. I ended up up involved and interested, I felt for all the characters. The succession of meals out were so realistic I felt I was amongst them. A busy listen that kept me intrigued.

Eating out, social occasions, some sweet mostly excruciating

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the a narrator is the highlight of this story! the story is ok enjoyable. strange ending

narrator is amazing

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