
The Nightingales
Emil Wilson(Author)
Jonathan Cape (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 6. August 2026
Book
Hardback
416 pages
978-1-78733-656-8 (ISBN)
Description
'Tender and humane. I loved this book' Mark Haddon
'Filled with heart and warmth and colour... [a book that] stays with you long after you've turned the last page' Sean Hewitt'
A stunning graphic novel set in 1980s smalltown America about a seventeen-year-old girl and the dying stranger who moves into her family's home
It's spring 1985 when Emil Wilson's father, Donald, quietly invites his colleague Jim to move in with his family. What Don doesn't tell his wife Annemarie or his teenage daughter Lou is that Jim has AIDS.
For small-town Oregon in the eighties, a place where Lou's treasured New York Times arrives three days late, AIDS is still a news story that happens in faraway places to faraway people. Jim is worldly, witty and quickly deteriorating. His presence in the house turns the family upside down.
As Annemarie's fear and resentment grow, adding further strain to the family's shaky foundations, Lou forms an unlikely friendship with Jim (and his two showbiz Pomeranians, Henny and Penny) - a friendship that pushes Lou to grow up, get out and imagine a life beyond the limits of her town.
Tender, funny and gorgeously illustrated in full colour, The Nightingales is an unforgettable portrait of an imperfect family, and a coming of age shaped by love and loss.
A beautiful, honest book about friendship and family' Lizzy Stewart
'A coming-of-age story for the ages... This book is a triumph' Gregory Maguire
'Filled with heart and warmth and colour... [a book that] stays with you long after you've turned the last page' Sean Hewitt'
A stunning graphic novel set in 1980s smalltown America about a seventeen-year-old girl and the dying stranger who moves into her family's home
It's spring 1985 when Emil Wilson's father, Donald, quietly invites his colleague Jim to move in with his family. What Don doesn't tell his wife Annemarie or his teenage daughter Lou is that Jim has AIDS.
For small-town Oregon in the eighties, a place where Lou's treasured New York Times arrives three days late, AIDS is still a news story that happens in faraway places to faraway people. Jim is worldly, witty and quickly deteriorating. His presence in the house turns the family upside down.
As Annemarie's fear and resentment grow, adding further strain to the family's shaky foundations, Lou forms an unlikely friendship with Jim (and his two showbiz Pomeranians, Henny and Penny) - a friendship that pushes Lou to grow up, get out and imagine a life beyond the limits of her town.
Tender, funny and gorgeously illustrated in full colour, The Nightingales is an unforgettable portrait of an imperfect family, and a coming of age shaped by love and loss.
A beautiful, honest book about friendship and family' Lizzy Stewart
'A coming-of-age story for the ages... This book is a triumph' Gregory Maguire
Reviews / Votes
Tender and humane, I loved this book -- Mark Haddon, author of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time A singularly beautiful book, the subtlety of its layered and playful visuals a match for the emotional intricacies of this family drama and coming of age story. -- Emma Donoghue, author of Room A beautiful, honest book about friendship and family -- Lizzy Stewart, author of The Wreck The Nightingales is a book filled with heart and warmth and colour. Though there is loss and grief at its core, it sings about freedom and the vivid urgency of life. Inspiring and full of hope, it's a book whose soul stays with you long after you've turned the last page -- Sean Hewitt, author of Open, Heaven Told with the utmost care, Emil Wilson's The Nightingales is exactly the kind of scathing, compassionate, and tragic family portrait that I love the most. I've urgently and insistently recommended this to every friend and loved one, so that I might have some company in laughing and crying and savouring this beautifully drawn story. -- Lee Lai, author of Cannon The Nightingales is as brilliant as it is beautiful, a study in family and kindness, of doing the right thing, of not the doing the right thing, of surviving a home fraught with dysfunction. Emil Wilson shows us that under duress some people can show immense kindness and warmth while others just falter and wither. The Nightingales is a serious gem -- Willy Vlautin, author of The Left and the Lucky A coming-of-age story for the ages. All ages. For anyone who has lived through loss (and who hasn't?), The Nightingales is a blessing sung after the tears have slowed down. This book is a triumph. -- Gregory Maguire, author of Wicked The Nightingales is a book awash with tenderness, with the audacity and courage to make a room for kindness, with art that performs on each and every page the beautiful and most humane acts of remembering - particular, impressionistic, incomplete, eidetic, afire with humor and compassion. Here is an extraordinary achievement that takes history and offers it to the future as the most forgiving gift. -- Mark Z. Danielewski, author of House of Leaves Gorgeously illustrated and emotionally piercing, this coming-of-age story set at the height of the AIDs epidemic shows how impactful one friendship can be on the direction of a life. Nuanced, empathetic, and impossible to set down. Highly recommended! -- Maia Kobabe, author of Gender Queer: A Memoir This graphic novel is stunning in every way. Wilson forgos panels in favor of a format that is part sketchbook, part journal, and part scrapbook-a choice that gives both the visuals and the narrative room to breathe. The artwork has an intimacy and immediacy that complements the text beautifully, and the vibrant color palette communicates the joy that the relationship between Lou and Jim brings them both. Sensitive but blunt and mordantly funny, Lou is a great narrator. Jim is also a wonderfully well-crafted character. He is, by turns, charming and sentimental and ironic and angry . . . Absolutely gorgeous, visually and emotionally * Kirkus Reviews, starred review *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Vintage Publishing
Dimensions
Height: 260 mm
Width: 181 mm
Thickness: 40 mm
Weight
750 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-78733-656-8 (9781787336568)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Person
Emil Wilson is an art director, illustrator, and comic artist based in San Francisco. His work has appeared in numerous magazines and newspapers, as well as on billboards, gas station walls, NPR, the Oscars, and the Super Bowl. In 2020, he was nominated for a Broken Pencil (Canada) award and earned an Ignatz nomination for "Promising New Talent. The Nightingales is his debut graphic novel.