Joseph Zigmond is a non-fiction publisher living in Brighton with his wife and daughter. Constance is his first book.
""Constance: Joseph Zigmond's razor-sharp debut novel explores a 60-year itch.""--Buzz Magazine ""Debut novelist Joseph Zigmond on capturing the myopia of young love and the importance of plot.""--Image ""A multi layered novel that beautifully observes the complex nature of longstanding friendships and the giddy immediacy of new love. Incisively witty yet deeply sensitive to the concerns of our age."" --Francine Toon, Author of Pine This is a heartbreaking but ultimately hopeful book, a searing portrait of love, betrayal, redemption and complicity.' --Laura Bates, author of Everyday Sexism and Men Who Hate Women 'A multilayered novel that beautifully observes the complex nature of longstanding friendships and the giddy immediacy of new love. Incisively witty yet deeply sensitive to the concerns of our age.' --Francine Toon, author of Pine 'It's elegant, sharp, heartbreaking and deeply human. . . It dances on ruined surfaces, falls into hope, flirts with beginnings, denials, and the indulgence of memory as a fiction. It's a searing exposé of the mutation of male desire. It questions what is toxic and what is catalytic in a lifetime, and what can be both . . . Astonishing.' --Emma Jane Unsworth, author of Animals and Grown Ups 'Witty and bleak, uncanny and humane, Zigmond's Constance does not flinch from the truth. This beautiful novel gives us the strength and pain of being young, the lessons and loss of growing up - and a prophecy of the future, already inevitable, in which even our losses will be taken away.' --Sam Thompson, author of Booker Prize longlisted Communion Town 'Constance is a novel about possibility- what our world may yet become and what terror and love can be found by those trying to survive it. Zigmond's writing transports us effortlessly across time, dropping us into cities in our past, present and future with ease. Unsettling and beautiful with a tantalising narrator who readers will be desperate to pin down.' --Brydie Lee-Kennedy, author of Go Lightly