Review
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Her Body and Other Parties is a love letter to an obstinate genre that won't be gentrified. It's a wild
thing, this book, covered in sequins and scales, blazing with the influence of fabulists from Angela Carter to Kelly
Link and Helen Oyeyemi, and borrowing from science fiction, queer theory and horror... Not since Karen Russell's "St.
Lucy's Home for Girls Raised by Wolves," in 2006, has a debut collection of short stories from a relatively unknown
author garnered such attention, or deserved it more. (Parul Sehgal New York Times)
A writer of rare daring ... there's a ragged glory to [the stories'] formal experimentation and erotic fearlessness, and
the gusto with which they reinvent horror, SF and fairytale tropes. (Justine Jordan Guardian)
Brilliant and unsettling ... Machado ranks alongside Shirley Jackson and Margaret Atwood, and she brings all her (there
should be a woman's word to replace "mastery") formidable skills to bear in this tale of the rent fabric of women's
lives ... Machado's narrators are articulate and thoughtful, with vivid internal lives. But she's sharp enough at
capturing the messiness of ordinary human behaviour to distinguish one character from the next, keeping the stories
distinct and marking each with flares of stark beauty. Machado has rare gifts, disciplined by years of writing short
stories for magazines, and her literary fearlessness has already been recognised in the US, where this collection was a
finalist for the 2017 National Book Awards. The stories in Her Body and Other Parties, on the vulnerability and the
appetites of women, their transgressions and their disappearances, have the depth of fairy tales and the grim rasp
of the best horror fiction. You cannot wait for her to tell more of them. (Financial Times 2018-01-06)
Brilliantly inventive and blazingly smart, these stories have the life-and-death stakes of nightmares and fairy tales;
they're full of urgent, almost unbearable reality. Carmen Machado is an extraordinary writer, an essential voice (Garth
Greenwell)
The stories in Her Body and Other Parties vibrate with originality, queerness, ity and the strange. Her voracious
imagination and extraordinary voice beautifully bind these stories about fading women and the end of the world and men
who want more when they've been given everything and bodies, so many human bodies taking up space and straining the
seams of skin in impossible, imperfect, unforgettable ways (Roxane Gay)
Machado's verve shines through: macabre, erotic, and never quite what they initially seem, these aren't stories that are
easily dismissed. (Lucy Scholes Independent 2017-12-21)
Daring ... Machado has created a provocative blend of fabulism, feminism, magic realism and lashings of sex. (Tatler
2018-01-09)
Striking ... spellbinding ... even the most banal settings become unnerving in Machado's pen, and her images linger with
the reader long after the last page has been turned. Although her voice is invigoratingly fresh, Her Body and Other
Parties never reads like a debut collection. Rather, it reads like a writer at the height of her powers - confident and
assured, fearless and experimental ... it feels like discovering a well-kept secret you immediately want to share with
everyone you know. (Kaite Welsh Diva)
Machado's work is visceral: tender, harrowing and , it crawls right under the skin of your imagination. (SFX)
A provocative and powerful collection (Sarah Shaffi Stylist 2018-01-02)
Book Description
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Wonderful and terrible humans skulk in the myths of Carmen Maria Machado's genre-bending debut - perfect for
fans of Angela Carter's Fairy Tales