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Fierce Appetites
Fierce Appetites
Oct 10, 2024 2:27 PM

Author:Elizabeth Boyle

Fierce Appetites

'Like nothing else you will read' Hilary Mantel

Top 25 History Books of the Year, The Times - the perfect gift for book lovers this Christmas!

Every day a beloved father dies. Every day a lover departs. Every day a woman turns forty.

All three happening together brings a moment of reckoning.

Medieval historian Elizabeth Boyle made sense of these events the best way she knew how - by immersing herself in the literature that has been her first love and life's work for over two decades.

Fierce Appetites is the exhilarating and deeply humane result. Not only does Elizabeth Boyle write dazzling accounts of ancient stories, familiar and obscure, from Ireland and further afield, but she uses her historical learning to grapple with the raw and urgent questions she faces, questions that have bedevilled people in every age. She writes on grief, addiction, family breakdown, the complexities of motherhood, love and sex, memory, class, education, travel (and staying put) with unflinching honesty, deep compassion and occasional dark humour.

Fierce Appetites is captivating and original - as an insight into the mind and heart of a groundbreaking scholar, and as a wise and reassuring account of what it is to be human.

_____________________

'Wonderful . . . I laughed. I cried. I was blown away'The Times

'Pure nectar for the imagination'Irish Examiner

'Unusual, arresting and genuinely enriching'Irish Times

'I loved this luminous, radical book about bodies in time. It is a deeply personal history, that simultaneously brings medieval myth and poetry to breathing, bleeding life. An education for the mind and the heart' Clare Pollard

'Highly original . . . engagingly candid [and] thought-proviking' Irish Independent

'An eloquent plea for the value of curiosity and the life of the mind, standing up the robustness of scholarship against the frailty of individuals, the resilience of myth against brittle daily preoccupations. It's an agile story, irreverent, capacious and constantly surprising: like nothing else you will read' Hilary Mantel

'Bracingly honest, fiery, funny, scholarly, Fierce Appetites really is a wildly good book' Hilary Fannin

'Extremely intriguing . . . I found myself completely absorbed' Ryan Tubridy

'I absolutely loved this utterly original book. Immersing myself in Elizabeth Boyle's considerable brain was a true privilege, and the way she uses medieval narratives to unpick her own present was endlessly surprising and beautiful. I read it in two sittings, devouring her perspective on life, love, loss' Clover Stroud

'Fiercely smart, strange, surprising, unsettling, unflinching' Jennifer O'Connell, Irish Times

'An outstanding achievement. Fierce Appetites defies easy categorization, is brilliantly written and simply deserves to be read' Darach Ó Séaghdha

'Everything is illuminated, magnified, revisioned: sexual desire, motherhood, family. Her writing is unorthodox, unnerving, and very exciting' Tanya Shadrick

Reviews

A book of blazing honesty that allows all the gorgeous complexity of the past into our messy present to remind us we've always been like this

—— Max Porter

Really REALLY good

—— Siobhán McSweeney

Boyle has the skill to move us between the raw and the refined, the mind and the body, the past and the present, the mundane and the marvellous without ever losing control of her dark materials

—— Fintan O'Toole

An astounding piece of writing

—— David Perry

Just as brilliant and hard to define as everyone says it is. You should read it. You will both learn things and be entertained

—— Jan Carson

An eloquent plea for the value of curiosity and the life of the mind, standing up the robustness of scholarship against the frailty of individuals, the resilience of myth against brittle daily preoccupations. It's an agile story, irreverent, capacious and constantly surprising: like nothing else you will read

—— Hilary Mantel

Pure nectar for the imagination, and it's my book of 2022

—— Clodagh Finn , Irish Examiner

Bracingly honest, fiery, funny, scholarly, Fierce Appetites really is a wildly good book

—— Hilary Fannin

I just love it

—— John Connolly

Unusual, arresting and genuinely enriching

—— Sharon Arbuthnot , Irish Times

Highly original . . . engagingly candid [and] thought-provoking

—— Martina Devlin , Irish Independent

I loved this luminous, radical book about bodies in time. It is a deeply personal history, that simultaneously brings medieval myth and poetry to breathing, bleeding life. An education for the mind and the heart

—— Clare Pollard

Fiercely smart, strange, surprising

—— Jennifer O'Connell , Irish Times

Extremely intriguing . . . I found myself completely absorbed. Fascinating

—— Ryan Tubridy

Everything is illuminated, magnified, revisioned: sexual desire, motherhood, family. Her writing is unorthodox, unnerving, and very exciting

—— Tanya Shadrick, author of The Cure for Sleep

An outstanding achievement. Fierce Appetites defies easy categorization, is brilliantly written and simply deserves to be read

—— Darach Ó Séaghdha

I absolutely loved this utterly original book. Immersing myself in Elizabeth Boyle's considerable brain was a true privilege, and the way she uses medieval narratives to unpick her own present was endlessly surprising and beautiful. I read it in two sittings, devouring her perspective on life, love, loss

—— Clover Stroud

[A] marvellous, astonishing, funny, moving, wise, reflective, deeply scholarly, fascinating book

—— Aidan O'Sullivan

All twelve essays are freighted with that fierceness the title trumpets

—— RTÉ Guide

This book is extraordinary . . . a wonderful work of women's memoir

—— Sinéad Crowley

Searing... A rousing, inspired voice demanding to be recognized and heard

—— Washington Post

Deft, essential, and a novel of poetic consideration, Assembly holds (the Black-British) identity in its hands, examining it until it becomes both truer and stranger - a question more than an answer. I nodded, I mhmmed, I sighed (and laughed knowingly, bitterly)

—— Rachel Long, Folio Prize-shortlisted author of 'My Darling From the Lions'

Bold and original, with a cool intelligence, and so very truthful about the colonialist structure of British society: how it has poisoned even our language, making its necessary dismantling almost the stuff of dreams. I take hope from Assembly, not just for our literature but also for our slow awakening

—— Diana Evans, author of 'Ordinary People'

Mind-bending and utterly original. It's like Thomas Bernhard in the key of Rachel Cusk but about black subjectivity

—— Brandon Taylor, author of 'Real Life'

Brilliantly sharp and curiously Alice-like... It centres on a gifted and driven young Black woman navigating a topsy-turvy and increasingly maddening modern Britain... Her indictment is forensic, clear, elegant, a prose-polished looking glass held up to her not-so-post-colonial nation. Only one puzzle remains unsolved: how a novel so slight can bear such weight

—— Times Literary Supplement

A piercing, cautionary tale about the costs of assimilating into a society still in denial about its colonial past. Brown writes with the deftness and insight of a poet

—— Mary Jean Chan, author of 'Flèche'

Bold, elegant, and all the more powerful for its brevity, Assembly captures the sickening weightlessness which a Black British woman, who has been obedient to and complicit with the capitalist system, experiences as she makes life-changing decisions under the pressure of the hegemony

—— Paul Mendez, author of 'Rainbow Milk'

This is a stunning achievement of compressed narrative and fearless articulation

—— Publisher's Weekly

One of the most talked-about debuts of the year . . . you'll read it in one sitting

—— Sunday Times Style

Thrilling... Brown gets straight to the point. With delivery as crisp and biting into an apple, she short-circuits expectation... This is [the narrator's] story, and she will tell it how she wishes, unpicking convention and form. Like The Drivers' Seat by Muriel Spark, it's thrilling to see a protagonist opting out and going her own way

—— Scotsman

A nuanced, form-redefining exploration on class, work, gender and race

—— Harper’s Bazaar

Across 100 lean pages, Brown deftly handles a gigantic literary heritage... Her style rivals the best contemporary modernists, like Eimear McBride and Rachel Cusk; innocuous or obscure on a first reading, punching on a second... Assembly is only the start

—— Daily Telegraph

There's something of Isherwood in Brown's spare, illuminating prose... A series of jagged-edged shards that when accumulated form an unhappy mirror in which modern Britain might examine itself

—— Literary Review

A debut novel as slender and deadly as an adder

—— Los Angeles Times

A razor-sharp debut... This powerful short novel suggests meaningful discussion of race is all but impossible if imperialism's historical violence remains taboo

—— Daily Mail

Bold, spare, agonisingly well-observed. An impressive debut

—— Tatler

Excoriating, unstoppable... The simplicity of the narrative allows complexity in the form: over barely a hundred pages, broken into prose fragments that have been assembled with both care and mercilessness

—— London Review of Books

Beguiling and beautifully written, this is the work of an author with a bright future

—— Tortoise

Coruscating originality, emotional potency, astonishing artistic vim... This signals the arrival of a truly breathtaking literary voice... A scintillating tour de force

—— Yorkshire Times

Fierce and accomplished, Assembly interrogates the high cost of surviving in a system designed to exclude you

—— Economist

I was blown away by Assembly, an astonishing book that forces us to see what's underpinning absolutely everything

—— Lauren Elkin, author of 'Flaneuse'

Coiled and charged, a small shockwave... Sometimes you come across a short novel of such compressed intensity that you wonder why anyone would bother reading longer narratives... [Assembly] casts a huge shadow

—— MoneyControl

A masterwork . . . it contains centuries of wisdom, aesthetic experimentation and history. Brown handles her debut with a surgeon's control and a musician's sensitivity to sound

—— Tess Gunty , Guardian

An extraordinary book, and a compelling read that had me not only gripped but immediately determined to listen again... Highly recommended

—— Financial Times on 'Assembly' in audiobook

'As utterly, urgently brilliant as everyone has said. A needle driven directly into the sclerotic heart of contemporary Britain. Beautiful proof that you don't need to write a long book, just a good book'

—— Rebecca Tamas, author of 'Witch'

Every line of this electrifying debut novel pulses with canny social critique

—— Oprah Daily

Devastatingly eloquent, bold, poignant

—— Shelf Awareness

An achievement that will leave you wondering just how it's possible that this is only the author's very first work... Brown packs so much commentary and insight inside of every single sentence... Original and startling all at once. After reading Assembly, I cannot wait to see what Natasha Brown does next

—— Shondaland

[Brown's] work is like that of an excellent photographer - you feel like you are finally seeing the world sharply and without the common filters. That is hypnotising

—— Rowan Hisayo Buchanan , Guardian

A brilliantly compressed, existentially daring study of a high-flying Black woman negotiating the British establishment

—— Guardian, 'Best Fiction of 2021' , Justine Jordan
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