Hackenfeller's Ape (Faber Editions): Introduced by Sarah Hall
By (Author) Brigid Brophy
Faber & Faber
Faber & Faber
3rd January 2024
5th October 2023
Main
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Dystopian and utopian fiction
Speculative fiction
823.914
Paperback
144
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 8mm
128g
'Pitch-perfect.' - Ali Smith'So original.' - Hilary Mantel
'Stunning.' - Isabel Waidner
'Her beastly, risky best.' - Eley Williams
When my species has destroyed itself, we may need yours to start it all again.
In London Zoo, Professor Darrylhyde is singing to the apes again. Outside their cage, he watches the two animals, longing to observe the mating ritual of this rare species. But Percy, inhibited by confinement and melancholy, is repulsing Edwina's desirous advances. Soon, the Professor's connection increases as he talks, croons, befriends - so when a scientist arrives on a secret governmental mission to launch Percy into space, he vows to secure his freedom. But when met by society's indifference, he takes matters into his own hands . . .
A trailblazing animal rights campaigner, Brigid Brophy's sensational 1953 novel is as provocative and philosophical seventy years on. An electric moral fable, it is as much a blazingly satirical reflection on homo sapiens as the non-human - on our capacity for violence, red in tooth and claw, not only to other species, but our own.
'Flawless.' - Sunday Times
'Ingenious.' - Observer
'Sheer originality.' - Daily Telegraph
'So refreshing and interesting: the opulence, playful excess, brittle wit.' - Hilary Mantel (on The Snow Ball)
'I read it in one sitting ... Wonderful!' - Claire-Louise Bennett (on The Snow Ball)
Brigid Brophy (1929-1995) was a British novelist, critic and political campaigner, championing causes as diverse as feminism, homosexual equality, pacifism, prison reform, humanism and vegetarianism (her 1965 Sunday Times manifesto, 'The Rights of Animals', kick-started the movement). She also co-founded the Writers' Action Group, which campaigned for Public Lending Right. A public intellectual and left-wing activist in the 1960s, Brophy was a byword for controversy: 'Britain's foremost literary shrew'. Openly bisexual, she was expelled from Oxford for 'indiscretions' and began an open marriage with Michael Levey, director of the National Gallery, in 1954, encompassing relationships with Iris Murdoch and Maureen Duffy. She wrote seven celebrated novels as well as non-fiction on Mozart, Beardsley and Firbank. Brophy was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 1983 and died in 1995. Sarah Hall was born in Cumbria. She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and Professor of Practice at the University of Cumbria. Twice nominated for the Man Booker Prize, she is the award-winning author of six novels and three short- story collections: The Beautiful Indifference, Madame Zero and Sudden Traveller. She is currently the only author to be four times shortlisted for the BBC National Short Story Award, and twice its winner with 'Mrs Fox' and 'The Grotesques'. Her most recent novel is Burntcoat, which was shortlisted for the National Book Critics Circle Award in the USA and he South Bank Sky Arts award, as well as being longlisted for The Dublin Literary Award.