Feed My Dear Dogs
By (Author) Emma Richler
HarperCollins Publishers
HarperPerennial
1st May 2006
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.92
Paperback
304
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 32mm
346g
A warm, dark novel of family, distance and time from the author of the much-loved, highly-praised, prize-nominated Sister Crazy.
Feed My Dear Dogs begins in outright observational comedy and slides into ever darker regions, while never losing its sharp tongue and wicked wit. Jem Weiss is the middle child of five and experiences childhood more acutely, more joyously and more entertainingly than most. The five Weiss siblings crackle with intelligence, camaraderie, competitiveness and individuality; they have their own running gags, jargon, skits and power struggles; they share a bearlike but adored father and an unflappable and omnicompetent mother.
Jem's life hums with Shackleton and supernovas, boxing and cowboys, binocular doughnuts and naval underwear and at the centre of this galaxy of delights is her shining family. As Jem runs her childhood memories through her fingers, she entrances the reader with sharp observations, casual wisdom and tender wit. However, there's always something else looming, and now and again it sneaks up with some pressing tidings to impart a child's terror at the prospect of moving on, growing up, leaving home.
'Emma Richler has written a masterpiece; a brilliant and deeply moving novel that defies description.' Matthew Alexander, Sunday Telegraph 'Jem's voice is a great accomplishment: confiding, ingenuous, with a convincing thirst for answers and approval' Scotland on Sunday Emma Richler 'tackles another surprisingly difficult subject: how to write about a childhood that is almost idyllically stable and loving. She does so with warmth and some brilliant left-field humour' Jonathan Coe, Guardian 'In such an inward looking novel, much depends on the authenticity of the child's voice. Richler pulls this off with panache' Daily Telegraph 'This is a glorious hymn of praise to family, determindly and sometimes troublingly setting out to prove Tolstoy wrong. This is a book about growing up, and Richler uses a charming and cunning conflation of mature and immature vocabulary to capture childhood confusions. For all Jem's anxieties, this is a joyful book about a joyful family that sees the goodness in nearly everyone. But -- the real sting in the tale -- maybe you can love your family too much' Jonathan Myerson, Independent 'That gap between inside and outside -- of the body, of the mind and of the family -- is what powers this dramatic intense novel. Emma Richler's impressive and ambitious recapturing of youth brings us a family that is unlikely to resemble our own, but that is presented to us by a voice that seems immediately familiar' Alex Clark, TLS From the reviews for SISTER CRAZY: 'Emma Richler is a very, very clever girl.' ZoA" Wanamaker, The Times 'A joy to read.' Alice Munro 'An impressive and important first novel. Not an excess word -- both comic and deeply serious. A truly dazzling debut.' Beryl Bainbridge 'The tone is confiding, the form original and I was charmed and impressed.' Observer 'A charmer with a dangerous undertow' Time Out 'There is an enticingly breathless quality to Richler's prose, and in a childlike dash, she guides us through her elegy for lost youth. Her incisive observations on the intricacies of family dynamics are by turns whimsical, intense and darkly funny.' TLS 'Stunning!Richler has written a deeply moving book. Her language is electric, her formal poise astonishing in a first novel; her observations of the world of children, of the terror of madness, riveting. And she is bold and witty and will make you laugh out loud.' Lisa Appignanesi
Emma Richler was born in London and grew up in London and Montreal. She trained as an actress in New York City and worked in the UK in theatre, film, television and on BBC Radio.