Combining an intriguing mystery with political scrutiny, Cosslett reveals how four walls can mean so much more than bricks and mortar. * Stylist * Set in 2011 and the 1980s, [ Rhiannon's] excellent début novel tells the edgy and compelling story of Harmony. * A Previewer Pick, The Bookseller * A brave, beautiful, coming of age novel - full of generational conflict, trauma, and Bohemianism. Truly a writer to watch. * Nina Stibbe * Surprising and keenly observed, this is an original contemporary presentation of London: nostalgic but also brutal, with deft and poignant cultural comparisons. A jagged, bold, time-twisting dazzler! * Emma Jane Unsworth * An elegiac intergenerational howl that answers boldly back to its literary parents. Cossletts talent for social commentary continues to arraign and amuse in this boozy tainted love-song to London. * Claire Lowdon * The Tyranny of Lost Things is a hazy, evocative novel about place and belonging and a beautiful love letter to London in the summer * Sophie Mackintosh * Cosslett paints a portrait of millennial London, contrasted with the idealism of Harmony's bohemian parents... Compelling. * The Herald * I absolutely loved it and cannot recommend it enough, especially for fans of Ali Smith. * Jordan Baker, @bookish_j_ *