Friends & Dark Shapes
By (Author) Kavita Bedford
Text Publishing
The Text Publishing Company
2nd March 2021
Australia
General
Fiction
Contemporary lifestyle fiction
Short-listed for The University of Queensland Fiction Book Award, Queensland Literary Awards 2021 (Australia)
Paperback
256
Width 153mm, Height 234mm
A group of friends moves into a share house in Redfern. They are all on the cusp of thirty and big life changes, navigating insecure employment and housing, second-generation identity, online dating and social alienationand one of them, our narrator, has just lost her father.
How do you inhabit a space where the landscape is shifting around you, when your sense of self is unravelling What meaning does time have in the midst of grief
Through emotionally rich vignettes tinged with humour, Friends & Dark Shapes sketches the contours of contemporary life. It is a novel of love and loss, of constancy and change. Most of all, it is about looking for connection in an estranged world.
Such a vivid geography: this is a work of smart intensities, witty sorrow and wise coming-to-terms with grief. Astute, wry and beautifully tender. * Gail Jones *
'Friends & Dark Shapes is an achingly relatable, thought-provoking and compelling debut, full of gorgeous sentences that stopped me in my tracks...I loved every minute of it. * Ewa Ramsey *
Friends & Dark Shapes smells and feels and tastes like Sydney, like grief, like the limbo and the lucidity of your twenties. Bedfords poetic yet sparse, fearless yet gentle prose makes this a book to be savoured. * Laura McPhee-Browne *
'An astonishingly assured debut, full of razor-sharp observations about what it means to live precariously in a changing city. It's hard to believe this is Bedford's first novel. Her voice is already fully formed. * Jenny Offill *
'Friends & Dark Shapes is a tender look at the myriad ways that a body can hold grief. Kavita Bedford writes lyrically and longingly, imbuing sweetness and darkness throughout. It was a genuine pleasure to read this book; I felt as though I were sitting with a close friend, whispering to each other, sharing close-kept secrets. It made me rethink how loneliness can manifest; how we sometimes hurt ourselves and each other. Friends & Dark Shapes is a real delight and Kavita Bedford is a true talent. * Kristen Arnett, author of Mostly Dead Things *
'Where Bedford shines is in detailing intimate human connection...Bedford subtly explores, too, the vulnerabilities and dangers, the uncertain desires, of being a young woman. Seeking pleasure with abandonor never being boring, as the Pet Shop Boys post-party mantra had itis a queasy, bittersweet comedown that Bedford, filtering her Didionesque prose (and her protagonists Didionesque generational cataloguing) through a wider emotional lens, excels at...Like Helen Garner and Christos Tsiolkas own debuts, Bedfords is more concerned with taking the pulse of young, artistically-minded people alive and struggling through the citys struggle, slipping and sinking through the every-nothing days of urban anomie and insecure work and relationships. * Guardian *
'With its slow build of emotion, sparse yet precise prose, and astute insights into modern-day adulthood, Friends & Dark Shapes is a thrilling debut for fans of Victoria Hannans Kokomo and Jennifer Downs Our Magic Hour. It will imprint its shape onto your brain, leaving you thinking long after the final page. * Readings *
Poignant and immersive * Writing NSW *
'Bedfords writing is compelling, lyrical and often nostalgic. Her characters, diverse in background, live complex lives with all the nuances and intricacies that are shared among second-generation immigrants. It is a beautiful and tender ode to Sydney. * Kill Your Darlings *
This stunning book has lit up my life. * Final Draft *
'Bedford beautifully portrays the life of an Australian Indian writer struggling with grief a year after the death of her fatherAn insightful view of a city in flux. * Publishers Weekly *
'This is a book steeped in the hedonism and the angst of youthBedford is clearly talented. * Sydney Morning Herald *
Bedfords writing is spare, yet it has more than enough power. * Herald Sun *
Friends & Dark Shapes turns its lens onto diverse views of Sydney and reveals a compellingly complex place. * Australian Book Review *
Reminiscent of Rachel Cusks Outline trilogy An intricately observed mosaic that comes together to represent a multi-faceted story of a Sydney that is forever evolving, in ways both positive and destructive. * InDaily *
'Bedford writes extraordinarily moving sentences and it's exciting to see this level of talent in a first novel. * Australian *
Bedford has perfectly rendered the mind of a new millennial adult. * Big Issue *
'Bedford is a talented writer with a wonderful eye for detail, and her crisp, measured sentences are genuinely impressive. After grief, alienation and loneliness suffuse the novel, the story earns its way toward a sense of hope. * New York Times *
'An astonishingly assured debut. * Europa Editions *
The novel asks a question that is rarer than it should be in fiction, if infinitely common in life: not how should we handle our lives, but how should we handle our work * The Nation *
'An exceptionally gifted storyteller shares an intimate account of her experience as a foster parent and reflects on the majestic interconnectedness of our natural world. * Shelf Awareness *
The excellent writing elevates this into a powerful personal journey. * Good Reading *
A timely and thoughtful novel. * Cass Moriarty *
'Bedford brilliantly maps the city and examines the narrator's "dysfunctional relationship" with it. She also explores issues of race, identity and belonging through her heroine's journalistic assignments and encounters with immigrants and refugees. However, the novel is at its most powerful when it centers upon a world caving in and the aftershocks: what it is like to "lose a parent and lose your base. * Star Tribune *
'Dealing with grief, Millennial angst, racism and being an outsider in your own city, it is also an insightful portrait of the NSW capital, capturing its natural beauty as well as its darker side. * Nicole Abadee, Good Weekend *
A standout in its tender exploration of both a city and a daughters grief. * Suzy Garcia, Kill Your Darlings *
Beautiful, tender and heart wrenchingThe prose flows with a poignant tone, filled with wit and warmth that made me feel like I was catching up with a good friendMoments of everyday life are captured with a sharp sense of observation, wit and humour. A truly unforgettable, raw and emotionally charged piece of Australian fiction that stayed with me long after the final page. * Good Reading *
Kavita Bedford is an Australian-Indian writer with a background in journalism, anthropology and literature. Her writing has appeared in Guernica, the Guardian and Griffith Review, and she was a recent Churchill Fellow exploring migrant narratives. She works and teaches in Sydney in media and global studies.