Praise for Cherry Beach
"Gillmor really knows his stuffin a dazzling range of areas. A layered portrait of a changing city in the guise of a gripping crime novel, for fans of Tana French and Dennis Lehane." Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
"Cherry Beach is a largely captivating novel, the sentences by turns clipped and spare or expansive and stunning. And befitting of an author whos spent so much time in journalism, Gillmor doesnt pull any punches. The world he gives is an ugly one, much like our own." Paul Carlucci, The Seaboard Review
"[ Gillmor's] work . . . led him into worlds of crime and corruption. Now, hes writing smart, snappy fiction on the very same subjects." Edward Lander, Toronto Life
Praise for Breaking and Entering
"In a quiet story that takes place over only a few summer months, the Canadian author deftly converges doubt, infidelity and the fragility of family in a narrative that is both thrilling and relatable." New York Times
"Surely the most interesting midlife crisis of the year." Marion Winik, Oprah Daily
"Knowledge is mostly sadness in this intelligent . . . book: No matter where Bea breaks in, she keeps finding herself." Sam Sacks, Wall Street Journal
"The genius of this book is to capture the exact way a familiar world of aging parents and divorcing friends and nice charcuterie platters could go right around the bend . . . A smart, funny, and sneakily terrifying version of the way we live now. (Do not read without working air conditioning.)" Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
Gillmor succeeds at pulling you into the hopes, dreams, expectations, desires, anxieties and pathologies of his characters . . . Like jazz, the moments of tension in the book give away to moments of relief, only to return to building tension once more . . . reading it will strike a chord. David Moscrop, Globe and Mail
"A devastating and droll portrait of middle age that will be instantly recognizable to the 'sandwich generation,' stuck between kids and parents, and just generally stuck. It's a period of life that makes you want to do crazy things, and the only escape is other people." Stephen Marche, author of The Next Civil War