#BookSpotlight: Small Hours by Bobby Palmer @thebobpalmer @ollie__martin @headlinepg #SmallHours #BobbyPalmer #March2024

Ok so anyone who knows me knows that Isaac And The Egg is one of my all time favourite books. I always recommend it at the bookshop and make sure it has a face out spot as much as possible.

Therefore you can imagine my delight when I was offered a copy of his second book Small Hours! I’m not ashamed to admit there was dancing involved 🤣

Huge thanks to Ollie Martin and Headline for sending me a copy. I can’t wait to read it!

Out March 2024.

Book Synopsis:

The eagerly awaited new novel from Bobby Palmer, author of the critically acclaimed debut Isaac and the Egg.

If you stood before sunrise in this wild old place, looking through the trees into the garden…

You’d see a father and son, a fox standing between them.

You wouldn’t know that Jack has returned from the city, still determined to be the opposite of his father. Or that Gerry would rather talk to animals than this angry man back under his roof.

You wouldn’t imagine that neither is quite who the other remembers. That someone irreplaceable is missing. That one conversation might change everything.

If you saw them in the small hours, you’d begin to piece together their story. It’s about connection and belonging – and how the world comes alive when you stop to take it in.

About The Author:

The eagerly awaited new novel from Bobby Palmer, author of the critically acclaimed debut Isaac and the Egg.

If you stood before sunrise in this wild old place, looking through the trees into the garden…

You’d see a father and son, a fox standing between them.

You wouldn’t know that Jack has returned from the city, still determined to be the opposite of his father. Or that Gerry would rather talk to animals than this angry man back under his roof.

You wouldn’t imagine that neither is quite who the other remembers. That someone irreplaceable is missing. That one conversation might change everything.

If you saw them in the small hours, you’d begin to piece together their story. It’s about connection and belonging – and how the world comes alive when you stop to take it in.

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