Hot Milk

Author:   Deborah Levy
Publisher:   Bloomsbury USA
ISBN:  

9781620406700


Pages:   240
Publication Date:   09 May 2017
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Hot Milk


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Overview

"A New York Times Notable Book of the Year. Shortlisted for the 2016 Man Booker Prize, Hot Milk moves ""gracefully among pathos, danger, and humor"" (The New York Times). I have been sleuthing my mother's symptoms for as long as I can remember. If I see myself as an unwilling detective with a desire for justice, is her illness an unsolved crime? If so, who is the villain and who is the victim? Sofia, a young anthropologist, has spent much of her life trying to solve the mystery of her mother's unexplainable illness. She is frustrated with Rose and her constant complaints, but utterly relieved to be called to abandon her own disappointing fledgling adult life. She and her mother travel to the searing, arid coast of southern Spain to see a famous consultant--their very last chance--in the hope that he might cure her unpredictable limb paralysis. But Dr. Gomez has strange methods that seem to have little to do with physical medicine, and as the treatment progresses, Sofia's mother's illness becomes increasingly baffling. Sofia's role as detective--tracking her mother's symptoms in an attempt to find the secret motivation for her pain--deepens as she discovers her own desires in this transient desert community. Hot Milk is a profound exploration of the sting of sexuality, of unspoken female rage, of myth and modernity, the lure of hypochondria and big pharma, and, above all, the value of experimenting with life; of being curious, bewildered, and vitally alive to the world."

Full Product Details

Author:   Deborah Levy
Publisher:   Bloomsbury USA
Imprint:   Bloomsbury USA
Dimensions:   Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 20.60cm
Weight:   0.249kg
ISBN:  

9781620406700


ISBN 10:   1620406705
Pages:   240
Publication Date:   09 May 2017
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Gorgeous . . . What makes the book so good is Ms. Levy s great imagination, the poetry of her language, her way of finding the wonder in the everyday, of saying a lot with a little, of moving gracefully among pathos, danger and humor and of providing a character as interesting and surprising as Sofia. It s a pleasure to be inside Sofia s insightful, questioning mind. -<i> The New York Times</i></p> Highbrow/Brilliant. [An] intensely interior but highly charged new novel about family, hypochondria, Spain, Greece, and all kinds of sex. - <i>New York Magazine, Approval Matrix</i></p> Levy has spun a web of violent beauty and poetical ennui . . . the book exerts a seductive, arcane power, rather like a deck of tarot cards, every page seething with lavish, cryptic innuendo. - <i>The New York Times Book Review</i></p> Against fertile seaside backdrops, Sofia, seeking a robust, global meaning for femininity and motherhood, becomes increasingly bold herself. -<i> The New Yorker</i></p> <i>Hot Milk </i>is a complicated, gorgeous work. - <i>Marie Claire</i></p> A powerful novel of the interior life, which Levy creates with a vividness that recalls Virginia Woolf . . . Transfixing. - Erica Wagner, <i>The Guardian</i></p> Exquisite prose . . . <i>Hot Milk</i> is perfectly crafted, a dream-narrative so mesmerising that reading it is to be under a spell. Reaching the end is like finding a piece of glass on the beach, shaped into a sphere by the sea, that can be held up and looked into like a glass-eye and kept, in secret, to be looked at again and again. - Suzanne Joinson, <i>The Independent</i></p> Levy s language is precise. The absurdities of her style seem scattershot at first, but yield a larger pattern: a commentary on debt and personal responsibility, family ties and independence. - <i>Washington Post</i></p> Economical, fluid, evocative of sex and mythology . . . . Young Sofia . . . drop[s] beautiful bombs of truth. - <i>New York Magazine s Vulture blog</i></p> A singular read . . . Levy has crafted a great character in Sofia, and witnessing a pivotal moment in her life is a pleasure. - starred and boxed review, <i>Publishers Weekly</i></p> Scintillating, provocative . . . Levy combines intellect and empathy to impressively modern effect. - starred review, <i> Kirkus Reviews</i></p> Great lush writing [and] luxuriation in place. No writer infuses the landscape, urban or rural, with as much meaning and monstrosity as Levy . . . Unmissable. - Eimear McBride, <i>The New Statesman</i></p> A beguiling tale of myths and identity . . . provocative . . . The difficult, ambivalent, precious mother-daughter relationship forms the core of this beautiful, clever novel. - Michele Roberts, <i>The Independent</i></p> Among the questions posed in this heady new novel: Is Sofia s mother, Rose, sick or a hypochondriac who s feverish for attention? And more important, can the frustrated Sofia break the chains of familial devotion and live for herself? - <i>O, the Oprah Magazine</i></p> The author of the elusive, powerful novel <i>Swimming Home</i> has another tale of family dysfunction. In the unforgiving heat of southern Spain, wayward anthropologist Sofia Papastergiadis delivers her mother into the hands of an eccentric doctor whom they hope can diagnose the mysterious illness that has taken over her body. - <i>Elle.com</i>, 11 of the Best Books to Read in July </p> A fascinating book about sexuality, anger, medicine, and the drive to stay alive, <i>Hot Milk</i> is a unique novel that reads like a lucid dream. - <i>Bustle</i>, 12 Travel Books That Will Transport You This Summer </p> Mesmerizing . . . evocative and complex. - <i>Booklist</i></p> A terrific tale of mothers and daughters and fathers and daughters and confusion and old age, sickness, woe . . . and finding love tucked away in strange places. - <i>R.A.L.P.H. Magazine</i></p> Dazzling and, at times, deeply disturbing, <i>Hot Milk</i> is a mystery meets introspective coming-of-age novel. It's unnerving--and that's a good thing. - <i>Refinery 29</i>, 20 Books Perfect For Your Summer Vacay </p> The Man Booker short-listed Levy . . . draws in readers with beautiful language and unexpected moments of humor and shock. - <i>Library Journal</i></p> A captivating demonstration of why Levy is one of the few necessary novelists writing in Britain today. This is the poetry and playfulness of her prose . . . More important, Levy grapples with and presents the complex psychology and multiple facets of her female characters like few others, which makes the recent reappraisal of her life s work all the more welcome. - <i>The Forward</i></p> Levy's reputation as a singularly talented writer is on display throughout this novel, and this is most obvious at the basic level of the sentence. Her prose is lean and taut, poetic and rich with symbolism; each sentence shaped with care with nary a redundant word. - <i>PopMatters</i></p> <i>Hot Milk</i> is a purposeful work of how someone might find sustenance. - <i>Daily Kos</i></p> A fraught, intense bond between mother and daughter is poetically rendered in <i>Hot Milk</i>, Deborah Levy s follow-up to the 2012 Man Booker short-listed <i>Swimming Home</i>. - San Diego Magazine, 5 Books to Read in July </p> Acutely relevant . . . A triumph of technically adroit storytelling. Levy s elegant and poised prose has the rare quality of being simultaneously expansive and succinct . . . A breath of fresh air. - <i>The Literary Review</i></p> A superbly crafted novel that is an inherently fascinating and consistently compelling read from beginning to end, <i>Hot Milk</i> clearly reveals author Deborah Levy as an exceptionally gifted storyteller. - <i>Midwest Book Review</i></p>


Gorgeous . . . What makes the book so good is Ms. Levy s great imagination, the poetry of her language, her way of finding the wonder in the everyday, of saying a lot with a little, of moving gracefully among pathos, danger and humor and of providing a character as interesting and surprising as Sofia. It s a pleasure to be inside Sofia s insightful, questioning mind. - <i>The New York Times</i></p> Levy has spun a web of violent beauty and poetical ennui . . . the book exerts a seductive, arcane power, rather like a deck of tarot cards, every page seething with lavish, cryptic innuendo. - <i>The New York Times Book Review</i></p> In Levy s evocative novel, dense with symbolism, a woman struggles against her hypochondriacal mother to achieve her own identity. - <i>The New York Times Book Review, 100 Notable Books of 2016 </i></p> Against fertile seaside backdrops, Sofia, seeking a robust, global meaning for femininity and motherhood, becomes increasingly bold herself. - <i>The New Yorker</i></p> <i>Hot Milk</i> is a complicated, gorgeous work. - <i>Marie Claire</i></p> A powerful novel of the interior life, which Levy creates with a vividness that recalls Virginia Woolf . . . Transfixing. - Erica Wagner, <i>The Guardian</i></p> The novel's eerie atmosphere and sibylline turns of phrase have made <i>Hot Milk</i> the bettor's favorite for this year's Man Booker Prize . . . Its moody spell and haunted imagery pull you in. - Sam Sacks, <i>The Wall Street Journal</i></p> Exquisite prose . . . <i>Hot Milk</i> is perfectly crafted, a dream-narrative so mesmerising that reading it is to be under a spell. Reaching the end is like finding a piece of glass on the beach, shaped into a sphere by the sea, that can be held up and looked into like a glass-eye and kept, in secret, to be looked at again and again. - Suzanne Joinson, <i>The Independent</i></p> Levy s language is precise. The absurdities of her style seem scattershot at first, but yield a larger pattern: a commentary on debt and personal responsibility, family ties and independence. - <i>Washington Post</i></p> Highbrow/Brilliant. [An] intensely interior but highly charged new novel about family, hypochondria, Spain, Greece, and all kinds of sex. - <i>New York Magazine, Approval Matrix</i></p> Economical, fluid, evocative of sex and mythology . . . . Young Sofia . . . drop[s] beautiful bombs of truth. - <i>New York Magazine s Vulture blog</i></p> A singular read . . . Levy has crafted a great character in Sofia, and witnessing a pivotal moment in her life is a pleasure. - starred and boxed review, <i>Publishers Weekly</i></p> Scintillating, provocative . . . Levy combines intellect and empathy to impressively modern effect. - starred review, <i>Kirkus Reviews</i></p> Kinship, gender, Medusas--this rich new novel from a highly regarded British writer dazzles and teases with its many connections while exposing the double-edged sword of mother-daughter love. - <i>Kirkus Reviews, Best 2016 Fiction for Armchair Travel </i></p> Great lush writing [and] luxuriation in place. No writer infuses the landscape, urban or rural, with as much meaning and monstrosity as Levy . . . Unmissable. - Eimear McBride, <i>The New Statesman</i></p> A beguiling tale of myths and identity . . . provocative . . . The difficult, ambivalent, precious mother-daughter relationship forms the core of this beautiful, clever novel. - Michele Roberts, <i>The Independent</i></p> Among the questions posed in this heady new novel: Is Sofia s mother, Rose, sick or a hypochondriac who s feverish for attention? And more important, can the frustrated Sofia break the chains of familial devotion and live for herself? - <i>O, the Oprah Magazine</i></p> Deborah Levy s intoxicating and beautifully crafted novel, a worthy finalist for the Man Booker Prize, digs deep in its exploration of female sexuality, strained family bonds and hypochondria. - <i>Minneapolis Star Tribune, 50 Best Books for Holiday Giving </i></p> The author of the elusive, powerful novel <i>Swimming Home</i> has another tale of family dysfunction. In the unforgiving heat of southern Spain, wayward anthropologist Sofia Papastergiadis delivers her mother into the hands of an eccentric doctor whom they hope can diagnose the mysterious illness that has taken over her body. - <i>Elle.com, 11 of the Best Books to Read in July </i></p> A fascinating book about sexuality, anger, medicine, and the drive to stay alive, <i>Hot Milk </i>is a unique novel that reads like a lucid dream. - <i>Bustle, 12 Travel Books That Will Transport You This Summer </i></p> Mesmerizing . . . evocative and complex. - <i>Booklist</i></p> A terrific tale of mothers and daughters and fathers and daughters and confusion and old age, sickness, woe . . . and finding love tucked away in strange places. - <i>R.A.L.P.H. Magazine</i></p> Dazzling and, at times, deeply disturbing, <i>Hot Milk</i> is a mystery meets introspective coming-of-age novel. It's unnerving--and that's a good thing. - <i>Refinery 29, 20 Books Perfect For Your Summer Vacay </i></p> The Man Booker short-listed Levy . . . draws in readers with beautiful language and unexpected moments of humor and shock. - <i>Library Journal</i></p> A captivating demonstration of why Levy is one of the few necessary novelists writing in Britain today. This is the poetry and playfulness of her prose . . . More important, Levy grapples with and presents the complex psychology and multiple facets of her female characters like few others, which makes the recent reappraisal of her life s work all the more welcome. - <i>The Forward</i></p> Levy's reputation as a singularly talented writer is on display throughout this novel, and this is most obvious at the basic level of the sentence. Her prose is lean and taut, poetic and rich with symbolism; each sentence shaped with care with nary a redundant word. - <i>PopMatters</i></p> <i>Hot Milk</i> is a purposeful work of how someone might find sustenance. - <i>Daily Kos</i></p> A fraught, intense bond between mother and daughter is poetically rendered in <i>Hot Milk</i>, Deborah Levy s follow-up to the 2012 Man Booker short-listed <i>Swimming Home</i>. - <i>San Diego Magazine, 5 Books to Read in July </i></p> Acutely relevant . . . A triumph of technically adroit storytelling. Levy s elegant and poised prose has the rare quality of being simultaneously expansive and succinct . . . A breath of fresh air. - <i>The Literary Review</i></p> A superbly crafted novel that is an inherently fascinating and consistently compelling read from beginning to end, <i>Hot Milk</i> clearly reveals author Deborah Levy as an exceptionally gifted storyteller. - <i>Midwest Book Review</i></p>


Gorgeous . . . What makes the book so good is Ms. Levy s great imagination, the poetry of her language, her way of finding the wonder in the everyday, of saying a lot with a little, of moving gracefully among pathos, danger and humor and of providing a character as interesting and surprising as Sofia. It s a pleasure to be inside Sofia s insightful, questioning mind. -<i> The New York Times</i></p> Levy has spun a web of violent beauty and poetical ennui . . . the book exerts a seductive, arcane power, rather like a deck of tarot cards, every page seething with lavish, cryptic innuendo. - <i>The New York Times Book Review</i></p> In Levy s evocative novel, dense with symbolism, a woman struggles against her hypochondriacal mother to achieve her own identity. - T<i>he New York Times Book Review, 100 Notable Books of 2016 </i></p> Against fertile seaside backdrops, Sofia, seeking a robust, global meaning for femininity and motherhood, becomes increasingly bold herself. - <i>The New Yorker</i></p> <i>Hot Milk</i> is a complicated, gorgeous work. - <i>Marie Claire</i></p> A powerful novel of the interior life, which Levy creates with a vividness that recalls Virginia Woolf . . . Transfixing. - Erica Wagner, <i>The Guardian</i></p> The novel's eerie atmosphere and sibylline turns of phrase have made <i>Hot Milk </i>the bettor's favorite for this year's Man Booker Prize . . . Its moody spell and haunted imagery pull you in. - Sam Sacks, <i>The Wall Street Journal</i></p> Exquisite prose . . .<i> Hot Milk</i> is perfectly crafted, a dream-narrative so mesmerising that reading it is to be under a spell. Reaching the end is like finding a piece of glass on the beach, shaped into a sphere by the sea, that can be held up and looked into like a glass-eye and kept, in secret, to be looked at again and again. - Suzanne Joinson, <i>The Independent</i></p> Levy s language is precise. The absurdities of her style seem scattershot at first, but yield a larger pattern: a commentary on debt and personal responsibility, family ties and independence. - <i>Washington Post</i></p> Highbrow/Brilliant. [An] intensely interior but highly charged new novel about family, hypochondria, Spain, Greece, and all kinds of sex. - <i>New York Magazine, Approval Matrix</i></p> Economical, fluid, evocative of sex and mythology . . . . Young Sofia . . . drop[s] beautiful bombs of truth. - <i>New York Magazine s Vulture blog</i></p> A singular read . . . Levy has crafted a great character in Sofia, and witnessing a pivotal moment in her life is a pleasure. - starred and boxed review, <i>Publishers Weekly</i></p> Scintillating, provocative . . . Levy combines intellect and empathy to impressively modern effect. - starred review, <i>Kirkus Reviews</i></p> Kinship, gender, Medusas--this rich new novel from a highly regarded British writer dazzles and teases with its many connections while exposing the double-edged sword of mother-daughter love. - <i>Kirkus Reviews, Best 2016 Fiction for Armchair Travel </i></p> Great lush writing [and] luxuriation in place. No writer infuses the landscape, urban or rural, with as much meaning and monstrosity as Levy . . . Unmissable. - Eimear McBride, <i>The New Statesman</i></p> A beguiling tale of myths and identity . . . provocative . . . The difficult, ambivalent, precious mother-daughter relationship forms the core of this beautiful, clever novel. - Michele Roberts, <i>The Independent</i></p> Among the questions posed in this heady new novel: Is Sofia s mother, Rose, sick or a hypochondriac who s feverish for attention? And more important, can the frustrated Sofia break the chains of familial devotion and live for herself? - <i>O, the Oprah Magazine</i></p> Deborah Levy s intoxicating and beautifully crafted novel, a worthy finalist for the Man Booker Prize, digs deep in its exploration of female sexuality, strained family bonds and hypochondria. - <i>Minneapolis Star Tribune, 50 Best Books for Holiday Giving </i></p> The author of the elusive, powerful novel <i>Swimming Home</i> has another tale of family dysfunction. In the unforgiving heat of southern Spain, wayward anthropologist Sofia Papastergiadis delivers her mother into the hands of an eccentric doctor whom they hope can diagnose the mysterious illness that has taken over her body. - <i>Elle.com, 11 of the Best Books to Read in July </i></p> A fascinating book about sexuality, anger, medicine, and the drive to stay alive, <i>Hot Milk</i> is a unique novel that reads like a lucid dream. - <i>Bustle, 12 Travel Books That Will Transport You This Summer </i></p> An unsettling, poetic novel. - <i>The Atlantic, The Best Books We Read in 2016 </i></p> Mesmerizing . . . evocative and complex. - <i>Booklist</i></p> A terrific tale of mothers and daughters and fathers and daughters and confusion and old age, sickness, woe . . . and finding love tucked away in strange places. - <i>R.A.L.P.H. Magazine</i></p> Dazzling and, at times, deeply disturbing, Hot Milk is a mystery meets introspective coming-of-age novel. It's unnerving--and that's a good thing. - <i>Refinery 29, 20 Books Perfect For Your Summer Vacay </i></p> The Man Booker short-listed Levy . . . draws in readers with beautiful language and unexpected moments of humor and shock. - <i>Library Journal</i></p> A captivating demonstration of why Levy is one of the few necessary novelists writing in Britain today. This is the poetry and playfulness of her prose . . . More important, Levy grapples with and presents the complex psychology and multiple facets of her female characters like few others, which makes the recent reappraisal of her life s work all the more welcome. - <i>The Forward</i></p> Levy's reputation as a singularly talented writer is on display throughout this novel, and this is most obvious at the basic level of the sentence. Her prose is lean and taut, poetic and rich with symbolism; each sentence shaped with care with nary a redundant word. - <i>PopMatters</i></p> <i>Hot Milk</i> is a purposeful work of how someone might find sustenance. - <i>Daily Kos</i></p> A fraught, intense bond between mother and daughter is poetically rendered in <i>Hot Milk</i>, Deborah Levy s follow-up to the 2012 Man Booker short-listed <i>Swimming Home</i>. - <i>San Diego Magazine, 5 Books to Read in July </i></p> Acutely relevant . . . A triumph of technically adroit storytelling. Levy s elegant and poised prose has the rare quality of being simultaneously expansive and succinct . . . A breath of fresh air. - <i>The Literary Review</i></p> A superbly crafted novel that is an inherently fascinating and consistently compelling read from beginning to end, <i>Hot Milk</i> clearly reveals author Deborah Levy as an exceptionally gifted storyteller. - <i>Midwest Book Review</i></p>


Author Information

Deborah Levy writes fiction, plays, and poetry. Her work has been staged by the Royal Shakespeare Company, widely broadcast on the BBC, and translated into fourteen languages. She is the author of highly praised novels including Swimming Home (shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize in 2012), The Unloved, and Billy and Girl, the story collection Black Vodka, and the essay Things I Don't Want to Know. She lives in London.

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