Will Cohu was born in Yorkshire in 1964. Educated at Exeter College, Oxford, from 1992 he freelanced as writer, editor and journalist, mostly for the Daily Telegraph. His books include Urban Dog (2001) and Out of the Woods (2007). He has been twice short-listed for the Sunday Times EFG Short Story Award. His memoir, The Wolf Pit, was published in 2012 and shortlisted for the PEN/Ackerley Prize. He lives in Lincolnshire.
Beautifully written and original -- AS Byatt * Observer * Cohu is a writer with a profound understanding of human frailty, and one of the most appealing things about Nothing But Grass is the dignity it grants its characters... There is real compassion in the way the book traces the effects of time on people's hopes and dreams. These are, for the most part, ordinary working folk, the kind whose lives are rarely taken seriously by literature or in our cultural conversation; Cohu's book is a powerful and necessary antidote to the tired elitism of so many metropolitan literary novels... Cohu's insightful, moving depictions of both people and place illuminate what is an accomplished and memorable rural novel -- Melissa Harrison * Guardian * Cohu skilfully builds a narrative that reveals the reverberations of the Victorian past - and an enduring mystery - upon the present. He subtly details his characters' feelings, and though the consequences are tragic, they prove fertile material for fine fiction. -- Anita Sethi * Mail on Sunday * Thrilling... combines the social engagement of David Peace with Robert Macfarlane's talent for describing the countryside in crisp, fresh language. From ghosts of the Civil War to the meaning of the miners' strike, this is a beguiling tale about a rural England where questions of power and identity are as pertinent now as they ever were. -- Max Liu * Independent * A haunting debut... Ever since John Fowles' The French Lieutenant's Woman and especially AS Byatt's Possession, there has been a vogue for novels that alternate between the Victorian age and our own. Nothing But Grass is a cracking addition to this genre. -- David Grylls * Sunday Times * An enticing amalgam of Downtown Abbey and Wuthering Heights... Truly memorable...immensely poignant...deeply sensitive. -- Melissa Katsoulis * The Times * Gripping, absorbing and brilliantly done. As you read you are captured by a flow of people and emotions. Each era comes to life. -- William Leith * Evening Standard *