[A] spare, subtle, technically sophisticated novella about a cluster of family and friends in suburban Melbourne... Garner, one of Australia's most admired writers, is a master anatomist of ordinary lives across fiction and non-fiction... which refuses to be constrained by the conventions of literary form... a kind of choral consciousness in which one character's perspective slips into another's to create a complex story about love and sex that vibrates with life.
- Johanna Thomas-Corr, THE TIMES
Brooding, sensual, smartly-written... This is one of Garner's greatest talents: her ability to portray life on the page as it's really lived, chaotic, scrappy, sometimes wonderful and oftentimes horrible.
- Lucy Scholes, THE DAILY TELEGRAPH
The perfect example of a novel that omits, but provides enough rich detail to make the reader's work pay off... A tour de force of control and variety.
- John Self, THE CRITIC
Whichever form she's inhabiting, Garner is great company: perceptive, unsparing of others yet also self-questioning. Her books contain details that radiate long after you finish reading them.
- Max Liu, FINANCIAL TIMES
Helen Garner portrays her characters with a clear eye for their dreams, their insecurities and their deep humanity in this intimate and engaging short novel, which was first published in 1984.
Anne Enright
A slim, deeply humane work that tingles with life.
- Johanna Thomas-Corr, THE TIMES, Best Books of 2024
Australian novelist Helen Garner, writer of wonderful, pitilessly sharp-eyed domestic dramas, deserves to be better known, and this reissue of her 1984 novel, with an introduction by David Nicholls, is a corker... Garner writes delicious sentences and is crystal clear that life is a messy business.
- Katie Law, COLLAGERIE
One of the most significant Australian novels of the last fifty years... It combines omniscience with dirty-realist minimalism - a unique tenor lying somewhere between the styles of George Eliot and Raymond Carver - darting from one short episode to the next without exposition or anything but the most efficient kind of scene-setting.
- Chris Power, LITERARY REVIEW
This book is incredible. It's very short, but also intricate. It's strange and beautiful and constantly surprising. There's nothing else quite like it.
Mark O'Connell