- Published: 6 April 2001
- ISBN: 9780552998833
- Imprint: Black Swan
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 432
- RRP: $26.99
Five Quarters Of The Orange











- Published: 6 April 2001
- ISBN: 9780552998833
- Imprint: Black Swan
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 432
- RRP: $26.99
Harris presents a complicated but beautiful tale involving misfortune, mystery and intense family relations ... This intense work brims with sensuality and sensitivity
Publishers Weekly
Joanne Harris is masterly in her conjuring of the sense of time and place in the wartime segments of the book, and with almost poetic style she brings to life the smell of country cooking, and the movement of fish in the Loire and the stifling smell of orange oil
Yorkshire Post
The pace and balance of the book make it as enjoyable as Chocolat
France In Print
This shape-shifting drama switches easily between Occupied France and the present day. Recipes for luscious meals and homebrewed liqueurs interlace a storyline that spoons suspense and black humour into the blender in equal measure
Irish Independent
Joanne Harris's rather brilliant Five Quarters of the Orange is a fascinating page-turner with a compelling climax ... This is an absolutely remarkable book that deserves to be read over and over again
Punch
Harris's vividly sensual account of a nine-year-old's loves, loyalties and misunderstandings is a powerful and haunting story of childhood betrayal
Good Housekeeping
The author of the Whitbread-shortlisted Chocolat must win more plaudits for this elegant and epicurean novel permeated with the tantalizing flavours of rustic France
Publishing News
If you enjoyed Chocolat and Blackberry Wine, you are certainly ready to embark on this journey back to war-torn France, an unresolved past and a fraught future
Oxford Times
Vastly enjoyable, utterly gripping
The Times
Harris's prose is deeply evocative - the scent of freshly baked bread, fruit and wine and oranges rises off the pages. Darker than her other novels and less sentimental, this is a wonderful book; don't miss out
Image Magazine
Evocative descriptions of food and rural France are what we have come to expect from the best-selling author of Chocolat. With recipes and luscious depictions of food, this is the perfect book for a gastronome
Eve Magazine
Harris indulges her love of rich and mouthwatering descriptive passages, appealing to the senses ... Thoroughly enjoyable
Observer
Just as she did in Chocolat, Harris indulges her love of rich and mouth-watering descriptive passages, appealing to the senses with seductively foreign names, and evoking the textures and smells of food. These descriptions are suffused with a child's wide-eyed wonder that lends the story a magical quality, almost like a folk tale or a children's story. Even having the Occupation as a backdrop, Harris sets out to tell a story that proves, like her previous books, to be thoroughly enjoyable...
Guardian
Rich in detail, engaging all the senses and drawing one compulsively on to the unexpected climax
Time Out
As lyrically succulent as Chocolat and Blackberry Wine, this book probes darker corners of loss, enmity and betrayal
P S Magazine
Hugely enjoyable
Sunday Mirror
Joanne Harris a naturally sensuous writer, but her latest book has a dark core...Her descriptive and narrative talents are put to a profounder use...This gripping tale is bound to be made into a film. It's as vivid a journey through human cruelty and kindness as I've read this year
Daily Telegraph
A dark, gripping tale of how smell leads to tragedy and murder. Harris's vividly sensual account of a nine-year-olds loves, loyalties and misunderstandings is a powerful and haunting story of childhood betrayal
Good Housekeeping
Five Quarters of the Orange completes a hat-trick of food-titled tales with a riveting story about a young girl brought up in occupied France who's now an old woman harbouring a terrible secret. Harris is light-years ahead of her contemporaries. She teases you with snippets of a bigger story, gently pulling you in with her vivid descriptions of rural France until you can actually smell the oranges. Read it
Now Magazine
Beautifully told, it's a haunting and tantalizing tale that stays with you long after turning the last page
Mirror
The luscious prose, abounding in culinary metaphors and similes, which made Chocolat so readable, is once more in evidence ... a satisfying page-turner
Irish Examiner
Her strongest writing yet: as tangy and sometimes bitter as Chocolat was smooth
Independent
Harris is an acute observer of the lush French countryside, and her descriptions of it are a delight ... A luscious feast of a book
Literary Review
Outstanding ... beautifully written
Daily Mail
Harris' love affair with food and France continues. Savour it
Family Circle
Harris evocatively balances the young Framboise's perspectives on life against grown-up truths with compelling, zestful flair
Elle
The dreamy and almost fair-tale narrative remains undisturbed by the spectre of the Occupation, as Harris avoids moral or historical themes, to ponder on the internal and social turmoil of the protagonists ... Harris seduces her readers with culinary delights, through suggestive textures and smells which indulge the senses
What's On In London
Harris has a gift for injecting magic into the everyday ... She is an old-fashioned writer in the finest sense, believing in a strong narrative, fully rounded characters, a complex plot, even a moral
Daily Telegraph
Gripping ... Harris is on assured form
The Sunday Times