Early Levy: Beautiful Mutants and Swallowing Geography
By (Author) Deborah Levy
Penguin Books Ltd
Penguin Books Ltd
26th March 2014
6th February 2014
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.92
Paperback
208
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 13mm
155g
Back in print at last, two pioneering early works by Man Booker-shortlisted writer Deborah Levy BEAUTIFUL MUTANTSLapinski, a manipulative and magical Russian exile, summons forth a number of highly contemporary urban pilgrims. Through them, Levy explores broken dreams and self-destructive desires in a shimmering, dislocated allegory of its times.& SWALLOWING GEOGRAPHYLike her namesake Jack Kerouac, J.K. is always on the road, travelling Europe with her typewriter in a pillowcase. From J.K.'s irreverent, ironic perspective, Levy charts a new, dizzying, end-of-the-century world of shifting boundaries and displaced peoples.
She storms through the back door, refusing to be weighed down with rationalist and aesthetic baggage . . . [This] is a world on the brink of destruction but it's going down with a barnyard laugh and an explosive extravagance of imagination * Blitz *
It throbs its way into the imagination like the unguided missile it decries * Observer on BEAUTIFUL MUTANTS *
Distilled images of vital and unsettling power. Levy is one of the few contemporary British writers comfortable on a world stage * New Statesman *
She writes like a hyperkinetic angel * The Times *
Deborah Levy is a British playwright, novelist and poet. She is the author of six novels, Beautiful Mutants (1986); Swallowing Geography (1993); The Unloved (1994); Billy & Girl (1996), Swimming Home (2011), which was shortlisted for the Man Booker prize 2012 as well as the Jewish Quarterly Wingate Prize, and Hot Milk (2016). Deborah is also the author of a collection of short stories, Black Vodka (2013), which was shortlisted for the BBC International Short Story Award and the Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award. She has written for the Royal Shakespeare Company and the BBC.