'An exquisitely detailed, many-voiced tale of people, place and folklore ... a communication with lost voices rich in wonder, longing and exalted psychedelic flight' - Mojo I was swept along in this novels current, watching a landscape unfold to reveal the lives hidden in its crevices. A joyous tumble of animism, love, music and mystery that beautifully balances awe and irreverence: Villager left me with a sense of an ancient longing that is hard to shake off - Zoe Gilbert, author of Folk 'I gallumphed through the pages of Villager as though it was on fire ... Funny, thought-provoking and astoundingly clever - Adele Nozedar, author of The Hedgerow Handbook 'Villager is a marvellously inventive and imaginative fiction. A tremendous novel' - William Boyd 'Tom Coxs books are hedgerows. All about the journey and not the destination. They delicately link one stunning viewpoint to another whilst providing nourishment for the heart and soul, a safe haven for a host of endangered fantasies, musings and stories' - Alice Lowe 'Tom Cox is a master of effortless, fluid storytelling and Villager is alive with both gnawing edge and Cox's signature flavour of clipped, pragmatic humour which is perfectly juxtaposed with the unbounded imagination of Villager's world. It is a thrilling, comforting and entirely unique read, challenging the reader's sense of both what is familiar and what is alien. Its tender and dark and strangely comforting. I loved it' - Laura Kennedy, Irish Times/Sunday Times ,An extraordinary book [ Tom Cox] is policing that interesting boundary between what is folklore, what is actual history, and what is natural history - John Mitchinson, Backlisted podcast Tom is such an original mind, and brave in his approach to writing, so it's no surprise at all that he has written a novel that surprises, delights and fizzes with imagination - Sathnam Sanghera A glorious ramble This is an epic, oddball soap opera soundtracked by folk music, birdsong and the rattle of hedgerows against car windows Its psychedelic tangle suggests that our short lives can nourish the landscape, if we watch our step - Guardian