“[Walsh] writes the local dialect with a native speaker’s fluency, and her vibrant language digs deep into her characters’ emotional and social terrain . . . [She] excels in describing the milieu of her characters—the visceral language Walsh uses to evoke their experiences is very much her strong suit . . . Her talent [is] for understanding and describing how societal ills can infect a family to its core.” —Marisa Silver, New York Times Book Review
“The writing achieves a sparkling grace . . . Once Upon a Time in England is a wonderful book. Sheila’s arc from basket-case helplessness to new self-sufficiency is lovely to behold . . . Although the story has a deep, upsetting beauty, a reason to read Once Upon a Time in England is because its tension is the world’s tension. It’s not so much a mirror—mirrors are clear—as it is a distressingly familiar tangle of identity.” —Laurel Maury, The Los Angeles Times
“Covering some of the well-traveled ground of recent Brit lit hits like Monica Ali’s Brick Lane and Andrea Levy’s Small Island, this heart-stirring family saga offers a view into the lives and struggles of new immigrants and their children. Recommended.” —Library Journal
“A gritty, satisfying depiction of a family falling apart.” —Baltimore City Paper
“The novel courses with life, and the characters are rendered in visceral totality—there isn’t a putrid smell, quickening of heart, or tingle in the loins that isn’t laid bare.” —Emma Hamilton, Bust Magazine
“[A] poignant novel . . . Walsh navigates this treacherous territory with sensitivity and insight, the fragile hopes and plans of a family in distress, lost to one another as they explore the geography of heartbreak.” —CurledUpWithaGoodBook.com