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A State of Siege

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

A State of Siege

Contributors:

By (Author) Janet Frame
Introduction by Chris Kraus

ISBN:

9781804271995

Publisher:

Fitzcarraldo Editions

Imprint:

Fitzcarraldo Editions

Publication Date:

11th November 2025

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Genre:
Fiction/Non-fiction:

Fiction

Main Subject:

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

256

Dimensions:

Width 121mm, Height 197mm

Description

Magical powers inhabit the land to which Malfred Signal retires - freed at last of her responsibilities to a dying mother and the generations of young ladies who have learned perfect drawing techniques in her classes. Her first night in the idyllic island retreat that is to be her new home is one of terror: a storm is raging, an intruder pounding on her door, and calls to the police, the priest and the doctor over her still-unconnected telephone bring no result. This is the state of siege, painted in pigments of dark and light, the brush dipped in themes of selfhood and loneliness, of death and its counterpart, the need to survive, to live.

Reviews

Intensely personal, her writing is always spiralling in on itself, towards the condition of myth, and yet it nails the moment, pins down experiences so fleeting that others would never grasp them. What eludes ordinary language, she can capture in the extraordinary argot of her imagination.
Hilary Mantel


She is a singular writer. No one is quite like her.
Eleanor Catton, author ofThe Luminaries


Frame achieved that supremely difficult task of finding a voice so natural it feels almost as if it were not written.
Jane Campion,Guardian


Her writing is engaging and idiosyncratic full of a character that proves that the best way to strike deep with the reader is not to do what everyone else is doing, but to grasp your distinctive vision of the world and hammer it hard.
John Self,The Times (praise forThe Edge of the Alphabet)


Janet Frames prose is a highly volatile material. Words, sentences, paragraphs behave like mercury on the page, running this way and that, forming new shapes and smears from one silvery, trembling blob. Frames fiction made not of some stale conception of verisimilitude but of the shifting stuff of sentences, can take us to a borderless, boundless anywhere.
Kirsty Gunn,Times Literary Supplement (praise for The Edge of the Alphabet)


The most Woolfian of Frames work: with intense, often dissociated separate monologues and repeated imagery of light, sounds and shapes evokingThe Waves, and the long, turbulent journey by sea of Woolfs first novel,The Voyage Out.
Catherine Taylor,Guardian (praise for The Edge of the Alphabet)


A revelatory portrait of the sometimes unbearable unease of being a human, wrapped up in a consummately playful metafiction.
Ellen Peirson-Hagger,New Statesman (praise for The Edge of the Alphabet)


Frames writing frequently returns to the strange, self-doubling rituals of normalcy, required of us to find so-called connection.... Her sentences, always at the shore of some great nothingness, have the intricacies and echoes of a conch shell. Frame points us away from the sturdy book in our hands, toward the flimsy, the abandoned, the scrapped and scraped, the reflective, the ribboned. Toward stories that are nothing but a title, and masterpieces that can fit in the interior pocket of a handbag. There, she says, look. You almost missed it. Look what she has made.
Audrey Wollen,New Yorker (praise for The Edge of the Alphabet)


Frames writing is often compared to Faulkners, and her family history reads like a Southern Gothic novel. Yet Frame can be an extraordinarily cheerful, funny writer. Language was a source of continual revelation The Edge of the Alphabet is about trash, debris, dreams, the incommunicable and the excluded. The proposition Frame seems to be making is that marginality means semantic exile too; vivid, broken images are her characters alternative vehicles for communication.
Lucie Elven,London Review of Books (praise for The Edge of the Alphabet)

Author Bio

Janet Frame (1924-2004) was a celebrated New Zealand author of novels, short stories, poetry and the three-volume autobiographyAn Angel at My Tablethat was adapted for cinema by Jane Campion. Janet Frame won numerous local and international literary prizes including the Commonwealth Prize for Best Book. She was an Honorary Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and held two honorary doctorates. She was awarded a CBE in 1983 and in 1990 she was made a Member of the Order of New Zealand, the country's highest civil honour. Her work is in print around the world and has been translated into many languages.

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