"Karen Powells debut novel, The River Within, was a tale of class, grief and love set in 1950s Yorkshire. Her second travels further back into that countys past and revisits the lives of its most famous writing family, the Brontes. The story of moorland isolation, early deaths and burgeoning creativity is a familiar one, but Powell, with Emily as her first-person narrator, gives it new energy, capturing the vulnerability of the three sisters and their determination to make the most of their talents." * The Sunday Times *
"Emily Bronte, vividly reimagined. Karen Powell powerfully envisions the writers life and the transfiguring intensity of her art. With Fifteen Wild Decembers, Powell has served her heroine loyally." * Financial Times *
Powell summons the spirit of Emily with real finesse, in all her disdain for the world and her devotion to home and hearth. * Independent on Sunday (Ireland~) *
"Enthralling." * Victoria Hislop *
"What an astonishing book. Compelling, atmospheric and raw. I feel Ive had the extraordinary privilege of befriending Emily Bronte centuries after she walked this earth. A beautifully intimate portrayal that transportedme right into the heart of her life and world. And whats so clever about Karen Powells writing is that the story stands just as powerfully on its own merit without knowledge of Emily Brontes life and work. Bravo! Exceptional!" * Ruth Jones, writer, actor and comedian *
I was spellbound by this fictionalised portrait, brimming with the texture of the dank, wild hills of Yorkshire, the weight and power of grief, and the contentment to be found in daring to forge ones own path in the world. Delightful and intriguing; each sentence is so sharp, so shining. * Elizabeth Macneal, author of Circus of Wonders *
"I was completely enthralled by Karen Powells brilliant and imaginative recreation of the life of Emily Bronte. Its language is muscular and precise, its sympathy passionate, true and, in the end, overwhelming." * Anthony Quinn, author of Molly & The Captain and Curtain Call *
Wild and captivating, this takes us right to the heart of the Brontes story of creativity, sisterhood and survival. * Samantha Ellis, author of How To Be a Heroine *
This is an exquisite novel of rock, rain and heather, of ambition constrained by circumstance, of tragedy and passion.Vivid and moving. * Victoria MacKenzie, author of For Thy Great Pain Have Mercy on My Little Pain *
"I turned every page of Fifteen Wild Decembers with my heart in my mouth, totally immersed. This novel captures all the magic of Emily's wild spirit." * Georgina Moore, author of The Garnett Girls *
"It takes a special kind of writer to take a story you know and yet render it new, so that you find yourself full body sobbing at the end. Thats exactly what Karen Powell has done with Fifteen Wild Decembers, a creative reimagining of Emily Brontes life. Haunting. Beautiful." * Jennie Godfrey, author of The List of Suspicious Things *
Karen Powell paints with words to create pictures you can see so strongly in your minds eye that you want to hang the on your wall Theres great strength and power in the narrative, sometimes forceful, and sometimes delicate and subtle The work is evocative, nuanced and absorbing. * Elizabeth Chadwick *
This vivid, intimate imagining of the lives of the Bronte sisters transports us to the haunted, wild, exuberant heart of history's most extraordinary literary family. * Meg Rosoff, author of Friends Like These *
Interweaving meticulous research and exacting imagination, Powell has brought Emily Brontes thoughts and quirks, attitudes and gestures, sibling affection and rivalry alive on the page. The novel captures not only the fascinating peculiarity of the Brontes, but also the wild atmospheric weather in Yorkshire that puts a spell on everything. * Kit Fan, author of Diamond Hill *
A staggering achievement that breathes new life into the familiar Bronte story. By turns meticulous, arresting and lyrical, I was captivated throughout. The writing just glimmers. At times, sitting down to read this book felt like opening up a jewellery box. Karen Powell is a rare talent. * Adam Farrer, author of Cold Fish Soup *
"Emily Bronte and her siblings have long been the fascination of many. Powell dares to take us deeper, further, capturing not only Emilys voice, but also her mindset, her essence. Fifteen Wild Decembers is a bold, ambitious novel, but rendered subtly, in prose that doesn't clamour to be heard but is simply, elegantly awaiting discovery. * Sophie Parkes, author of Out of Human Sight *
A haunting work. Karen Powell is a fantastic writer, particularly in her depictions of the natural world where she echoes and expands on Emilys own genius. * Bridget Walsh, author of The Variety Palace Mysteries *
"Powell is a talent to watch." * Lisa Appignanesi, author of Everyday Madness *
"Poetic and bleakly beautiful, and Emily emerges from the pages like a phoenix rising....Dazzling stuff. Lay your hands on a copy and make it the literary soundtrack to your autumn." * Natasha Poliszczuk *
An immersive novel vividly capturing both the wildness of the North Yorkshire moors and the wildness at the heart of its inimitable protagonist. * Tawseef Khan, author of Muslim, Actually *
The way Powell writes is poetic, and melancholic: her language is era-appropriate, the descriptions raw and full of little details that could make you suppose the book is an authentic 19th-century artefact. Fifteen Wild Decembers depiction of Emilys short life feels like a stolen moment in time: she is passionate but lost in the big world, trying to navigate through the emotions and hardships of being a woman. * Buzz Magazine *
"A dramatic and uncannily accurate reincarnation of Bronte, in which Powell deftly erases herself so that the reader is able to hear her subject's voice loud and clear. The writing is exceptionally fine -- the fields, moors and tors around Haworth with their birds, becks, animals and barns are brought to life with all the lyricism and occasional brutality of Emily's own writings." * Helen Moffett, author of Charlotte *
"Dazzling." * New Writing North *
I love the Bronte sisters and know their story quite well but this book really gave it a fresh and interesting edge. I reentered their lives and saw things I hadnt seen before or things I hadnt noticed before I can see the passion behind the authors choice to write this book and reconnect with this world. * The Booktrail *
Fifteen Wild Decembers explores the connection between Wuthering Heights author Emily's emotions and the desolate moors she loved. * Keighley News *