"What a stunning debut! This coming-of-age story is filled to the brim with heart and hope and Howard's prose is simply breathtaking. The Other Valley is a brilliant take on time travel and a thought-provoking exploration of the boundaries between fate and choice. Make room on your shelves, folks, this book is going to knock your socks off."--Sylvain Neuvel, award-winning author of Sleeping Giants
"A bittersweet tale of first love and coming-of-age, as well as a unique take on the intersection of fate and free will."--Nikki Erlick, New York Times bestselling author of The Measure
"The Other Valley is as riveting as it is philosophically beautiful. Scott Alexander Howard asks us to imagine how we might live if our older and younger selves weren't lost to us, but waited for us somewhere. While the premise is uniquely speculative, the sensation of being stranded between the ambitious optimism of youth and the clouded uncertainty of the future is gorgeously familiar. Powerful and atmospheric, Howard's novel is one I hope to reread at different stages of my life." --Sara Flannery Murphy, author of Girl One and The Wonder State
"Part Ishiguro, part Amis, and somehow all its own, The Other Valley marks the debut of a phenomenally talented writer. Pay attention." --Sarah Langan, acclaimed author of Good Neighbors
"Thoughtful, touching and beautiful, The Other Valley is an accomplished and exquisitely crafted novel. Scott Alexander Howard takes readers into a unique world they are sure to remember, and introduces them to Odile, a fascinating character with an unenviable dilemma." --Adam Hamdy, acclaimed author of The Other Side of Night
"A moving tale of time travel and teen friendship...surprising and heartrending...this will leave readers with plenty to chew on."--Publishers Weekly "Stunning...Not only is this novel a quiet meditation on grief and love, but it also finds itself in conversation with larger philosophical debates such as the nature of mortality, fate versus free will, and how far a person will go--and what they're willing to risk--to spend more time with those they love. A thought-provoking exploration of ethics, power, love, and time travel that is perfect for fans of Ishiguro and McEwan."--Kirkus (starred review) "Deeply moving, gorgeously rendered, Scott Alexander Howard's The Other Valley is a powerful meditation on memory, and grief, and the possibility of real connection, even across time itself. Wonderful." --Steven Price, #1 bestselling author and Scotiabank Giller Prize finalist for Lampedusa
"In The Other Valley, Scott Alexander Howard takes an ingenious conceit and wraps it in a story of teenage love to explore eternal questions about second chances and predestination. Howard's novel is sensitively written, propulsively plotted, and unforgettable."--Kevin Chong, Scotiabank Giller-Prize finalist for The Double Life of Benson Yu
"The Other Valley is a complex and elegiac exploration of humanity and our relationship with time. Told through tender and thoughtful prose, Scott Alexander Howard's novel leaves you wondering about the choices you've made in your life, and whether you'd do them differently if you had the chance. It is a tale of loss, of hope, and of possibility. It is a book that will stay with you, if not for its questions about fate and consequence, then for its quiet and moving depiction of love and grief. I loved it."--Nicholas Binge, author of Ascension "Astonishingly brilliant. My book of the year." --Liz Nugent, internationally bestselling author of Strange Sally Diamond "Brilliantly conceived. The voice is accomplished and nuanced, and the story is a page-turner with a blistering climax. An astonishing debut." --Jan Zwicky, Governor General's Award-winning author of Songs for Relinquishing the Earth "A breathtaking meditation on grief and the fluidity of time, told in elegant, precise prose, and which speeds to an audacious ending." --Kerry Andrew, author of We Are Together Because "A stellar debut, full of heartbreak and hope wrapped up in gorgeous prose. Scott Alexander Howard is one to watch." --Christina Dalcher, author of Vox