Fever of Animals

$29.99 AUD

Fever of Animals

Overview

WINNER OF THE 2014 VICTORIAN PREMIER'S UNPUBLISHED MANUSCRIPT AWARD

WINNER OF THE 2016 VICTORIAN PREMIER'S LITERARY AWARDS PEOPLE'S CHOICE

WINNER OF THE 2016 WESTERN AUSTRALIA PREMIER'S LITERARY AWARDS PEOPLE'S CHOICE

For nearly five years I have wanted to write something about the surrealist painter Emil Bafdescu: about his paintings, one of which hangs in a little restaurant in Melbourne, and about his disappearance, which is still a mystery. But this is probably not going to be the book I imagined. Nothing has quite worked out the way I planned.

With the small inheritance he received upon his father’s death, Miles has come to Europe on the trail of the Romanian surrealist, who disappeared into a forest in 1967. But in trying to unravel the mystery of Bafdescu’s secret life, Miles must also reckon with his own.

Faced with a language and a landscape that remain stubbornly out of reach, and condemned to wait for someone who may never arrive, Miles is haunted by thoughts of his ex-girlfriend, Alice, and the trip they took to Venice that ended their relationship.

Uncanny, occasionally absurd, and utterly original, Fever of Animals is a beautifully written meditation on art and grief.

PRAISE FOR MILES ALLINSON

‘Allinson is unashamedly a serious writer, in the mould of dark luminaries like Roberto Bolaño, Thomas Bernhard, Robert Walser, and perhaps W.G. Sebald … Fever of Animals takes itself seriously, like good art should do … and it takes you seriously. All it asks is that you take it seriously back, and to do so is pleasurable and challenging and nourishingly sad.’ Readings Monthly

‘The play between truth and fiction, between the writing self and the self written, is one of the great pleasures of Fever of Animals … audacious, clever, and original’ Australian Book Review

Details

Format
Paperback
Size
210mm x 148mm
Extent
272 pages
ISBN
9781925106824
RRP
AUD$29.99
Pub date
26 August 2015

Categories

Awards

  • Winner of the 2016 Victorian Premier's Literary Awards, People's Choice Award
  • Shortlisted for the 2016 NSW Premier's Literary Awards, UTS Glenda Adams Award for New Writing
  • Shortlisted for the 2016 Western Australian Premier's Book Awards - Fiction
  • Longlisted for the 2016 Australian Book Industry Awards, Matt Richell Award for New Writer of the Year
  • Longlisted for the 2016 Indie Book Awards
  • Winner of the 2016 Western Australia Premier's Literary Awards, People's Choice Award

Praise

Fever of Animals is the exceptional first novel from Miles Allinson. It draws the reader completely into the world of Miles, a failed artist who is living off the last of his savings in a small town outside Berlin, and trying to make sense of his past. This is a worldly book, full of art and ideas, and yet so intimate that it feels like a conversation with a dear, intelligent friend. It is at once wry and tender in its depiction of Miles, whose struggles with letting go — of love; of illusion; of his dream to be an artist — are keenly rendered and endearingly human. Fever of Animals is masterful in its treatment of time and memory, and filled with such clarifying moments of observation and insight that it is heartbreaking to reach the final page. This is an exquisite, painterly novel, and Allinson is a writer destined for a cult following.’
Emily Bitto, Stella Prize-winning author of The Strays

‘It’s thrilling to read writing like this. Panels of visual perfection strung throughout give sustained lapidary brilliance … There’s a lot of learned conversation about art and art history … [and] some tender and anguished inquiries about whom we love and why … Underneath all of this is the eternal question about how to be authentically yourself in the world … [A]n extravagantly good novel. Not only does it have assurance and authority, it is made with that remarkable magical force of authenticity.’

Helen ElliottSaturday Age
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About the Author

Miles Allinson is a writer and an artist, and the author of the multi award-winning novel Fever of Animals. He lives in Melbourne.

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