Description
Shortlisted for The Authors' Club Best First Novel Award 2012
In the house where Marie lives, the cutlery is running wild ...
Madness and fairy story creep hand in hand in this darkly comic tale. At the top of a narrow driveway there is a shambling Victorian house full of dust and stairs. The walls inside are ancient emulsion, sloughing off the distemper walls in gorgeous ribbons.
The mice that infest the dining room chimney-breast are living out their own dreams and nightmares, learning voodoo and the meaning of love and forgiveness. In The Knife Drawer, dead bodies miraculously vanish as if scraped to nothing by pudding spoons.
Marie's mother has rather lost her wits since she did away with her husband. She could swear they're out to get her; even the house gets messy on purpose, all by itself. Marie's twin is living in a hole in the back-garden, small and round as a cherry pip, waiting to be discovered.
In The Knife Drawer the steak knives grow so hungry that they scream. When the children murder the rent man, things get a little out of hand ...
Padrika Tarrant's imagination is not a comfortable place to be, but it is darkly addictive. -- Sarah Bower Ink Sweat and Tears blog Her language is both precise and arrestingly strange. -- Nicholas Clee The Guardian Tarrant's stories are images trapped and corralled, temporarily, and put on brief display before they slip off of the page and back into the wilds from which they came. -- Laura Benedict Notes from the Handbasket blog
About the Author
Padrika Tarrant was born in 1974. She read sculpture at Norwich School of Art, where she developed an unhealthy fixation with scissors and the animator Jan Svankmajer. Fates of the Animals is her third book, following Broken Things (Salt 2007) and The Knife Drawer (Salt 2011). She lives in Norwich with her beautiful daughter and some lovely stuffed animals. She does not entirely trust her cutlery.
Reviews
Man Booker juries like small publishers and debut novelists, so how about this as the wild card? Tarrant is the author of a collection of (very short) short stories, Broken Things, which demonstrated her sensitivity, originality and keen sense of the darkness of life. All elements to the fore in this creepy, gothic first novel about a house and its mice.
-- Suzi Feay * We Love This Book *Awards
Short-listed for Author's Club First Novel Award 2012 (UK). Long-listed for Not the Booker Prize 2011 (UK).
Book Information
ISBN 9781844717255
Author Padrika Tarrant
Format Paperback
Page Count 368
Imprint Salt Publishing
Publisher Salt Publishing
Dimensions(mm) 198mm * 129mm * 26mm