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This is my second novel, Dreamland. The BBC has just commissioned it as a 6-part TV series.

Things people have said…

 

“A beautiful book: thought-provoking, eerily prescient and very witty” Brit Bennett, author of The Vanishing Half

“Dazzling and shattering" Nell Dunn, author of Talking to Women and Up The Junction

“A vivid, textural portrait, teeming with life and granular, sensory detail as well as wisdom. It does what the most haunting of apocalyptic novels do, which is to shine a light on what is already happening around us and ask that we wake up.” Olivia Sudjic, author of Asylum Road 

‘Entrancing… A dark and devastating funhouse ride through curtailed innocence and apocalyptic experience. And - most uniquely - a love letter to the waning magic and melancholy of British seaside towns.' Sharlene Teo, author of Ponti

Reviews

“Water courses through the novel’s page, but also its prose - its liquid grace and glinting sparkle – and the sheer irresistibility of a narrative that sweeps along with a force that feels tidal in its pull” The Observer 

“Enthralling… Blazing bright” The Guardian

“Superb” New European

“Shimmering” Mail on Sunday

 “A triumph, being as much a love letter to the heady ups and crashing lows of youthful entanglements as it is a paean to the former grandeur of its stark coastal setting. Read this now.” British GQ

It’s set in Margate in the near future.

In the coastal resort of Margate, hotels lie empty and sun-faded ‘For Sale’ signs line the streets. The sea is higher – it’s higher everywhere – and those who can are moving inland. A young girl called Chance, however, is just arriving.

Chance’s family is one of many offered a cash grant to move out of London - and so she, her mother Jas and brother JD relocate to the seaside, just as the country edges towards vertiginous change. 

In their new home, they find space and wide skies, a world away from the cramped bedsits they’ve lived in up until now. But challenges swiftly mount. JD’s business partner, Kole, has a violent, charismatic energy that whirlpools around him and threatens to draw in the whole family. And when Chance comes across Franky, a girl her age she has never seen before – well-spoken and wearing sunscreen – something catches in the air between them. Their fates are bound: a connection that is immediate, unshakeable, and, in a time when social divides have never cut sharper, dangerous. 


Set in a future unsettlingly close to home, against a backdrop of soaring inequality and creeping political extremism, Rankin-Gee demonstrates, with cinematic pace and deep humanity, the enduring power of love and hope in a world spinning out of control.

It came out with Scribner in 2021.

 

It took seven years.