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The Music Game

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Music Game

Contributors:

By (Author) Stfanie Clermont
Translated by JC Sutcliffe

ISBN:

9781771963787

Publisher:

Biblioasis

Imprint:

Biblioasis

Publication Date:

24th May 2022

Country:

Canada

Classifications

Readership:

General

Genre:
Fiction/Non-fiction:

Fiction

Other Subjects:

Modern and contemporary fiction: general and literary
Contemporary lifestyle fiction

Dewey:

C843/.6

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

304

Dimensions:

Width 133mm, Height 209mm

Description

Will appeal to readers interested in gritty coming-of-age stories about women and fiction that addresses LGBT and feminist issues. Themes of suicide, trauma, addiction, domestic violence, sexual assualt.

First published in French in 2018 by Le Quartanier, French publishers of Stephane Larues The Dishwasher (Biblioasis 2019)

Le jeu de la musique won the Ringuet Prize of the Quebec Academy of Arts and Letters, the Quebec Arts Council's prize for a new work by a young artist, and the Adrienne Choquette Prize for short stories, and was shortlisted for the Grand Prix du Livre de Montreal.

A novel comprised of linked stories, with shifting POVs. This aspect of form enacts subject: POV is fluid/transitioning like the gender identities of some characters

Music features as a motif throughout: Robbie Bashos Orphans Lament to Arcade Fires A Year Without Light

International in setting: from childhoods in French Ontario, to anarchists camps in California, to young adulthood in Montreal.

Reviews

Praise forThe Music Game

"Many have been the millennial offerings Ive read the past year, and while there is much to recommend ... the book I keep thinking about is Stfanie Clermonts The Music Game. An amalgam of short stories, childhood remembrances, dolorous journaling and deeply-felt romances, this multi-prize-winning novel is an ode to friends who seek alternatives to the systems theyve inherited."
Alex Pugsley, for the Globe and Mail

"Lets hear it for an indie sleaze-era novel ... class issues, deep friendship, betrayal, a gender transition and anti-globalization protests. You know, just ~Millennial~ stuff!"
NYLON

In her debut fiction, Montreal writer Stfanie Clermont locates a 21st Century equivalent to the 1920s lost generation in a group of young people trying to find meaning and connection in a world of dead-end jobs, unaffordable housing, and romantic disappointments ... The Music Game inhabits a liminal space between different bodies, psyches and geographies. Its characters can display the worst hipster traits ... and genuine insights into their inner selves and the nature of the world around them. If they share undeniable commonalities with lost generations before them, they are nonetheless, in Clermonts hands, rendered specific and unique."
Toronto Star

"The Music Game seems to ask us to return to those vital conversations about the way we have been hurt and about wanting to make things better, even if the room to do that may feel so out of reach. Its a book that allows us to escape our reality while also somehow facing it head on. It's a reminder of our fundamental interconnectedness, of the loss that still cuts through us every day, and, more than anything else, of the necessity of hope."
Open Book

"A stunning, incisive immersion into a community of young radical activists finding love, experiencing violence, rejecting hegemony and struggling to survive financially in a world of dead-end jobs."
Winnipeg Free Press

"Similar to the extremely successful Irish-millennial author Sally Rooney, [Clermont] portrays the complex feelings and emotions of her characters in simple terms, thus making them feel universal."
The Charlatan

"[An] audacious, honest, and liberating masterpiece ... The Music Game is about relationships, yet also about all the ways we desperately try to escape reality ... anyone whos ever experienced depression or anxiety will find healing through Stfanies loyal and beautiful ways of describing the inexplicable. She allows for contradiction; depth and lightness meet in a disturbing but cathartic way."
Apt613

"The Music Game's structure is what sets it apart. Each chapter tells a self-contained story from the point of view of someone within Sabrinas inner circle, be it a long-lost friend or a neighbour ... Clermonts reflection on activism is skillfully nuanced, exploring both the hopefulness and cynicism that often come with political engagement."
The McGill Tribune

"Stfanie Clermont confronts the futility of the pursuit of sex, rent, and art with a rare clarity. The Music Game may well show us how to absolve ourselves by sheer force of yearning alone."
Paige Cooper, Scotiabank Giller Prize-nominated author of Zolitude

Here is a clear, burning voice whose subject is uncertainty. Everything is precarious for young people in The Music Game: income, love, gender. This is a moving and melancholy portrait of a generation of urban people who have been promised absolutely nothing for sure.
Russell Smith, Scotiabank Giller Prize-nominated author of Confidence

"Stfanie Clermonts multi-vocal book The Music Game is a compelling debut, precise and vivid in its observations and deeply attuned to the emotional cadences of its characters. By turns, funny, tender, and harrowing, The Music Game tells a story that feels both urgent and elegiac."
Faye Guenther, author of Swimmers in Winter

"The Music Game is a bruising, jubilant, prismatic book, inhabiting the space where short stories and the novel overlap. Clermont writes with clear-eyed insight, imbuing her characters and their knotty relationships with dazzling vitality, even as many of them question whether they can bear to stay in this world or not."
H. Felix Chau Bradley, author of Personal Attention Roleplay

Praise for the French edition of The Music Game

"A remarkably well constructed first book."
La Presse (Montreal)

"The reader isn't spared the characters' suffering, and what shines is a new voice, one we're eager to hear more from."
Publishers Weekly (Quebec supplement)

"In The Music Game the moments when everything shifts are numerous and hold readers breathless because we know that nothing can be taken for granted, that a sudden reversal in fate or the unexpected reaction of a female character can turn everything upside down at the turn of a page."
Les libraires (Montreal)

"The voices Clermont creates make themselves heard as a rich, unusual pleasure of the sort one rarely encounters."
Revue Spirale (Montreal)

"In spite of the lack of ambition of its rather directionless characters, Clermonts collection proves to be a work of a breadth that is quite unusual in the Quebec literary landscape."
Revue Libert (Montreal)

"The Music Game has a very contemporary vibe in which the desire to live opens a makeshift path between apathy and revolt. Precision, lyricism, deep feeling: a hit for the youth of the 2010s."Grazia (France)

Author Bio

Born and raised in Ottawa, Ontario, Stfanie Clermont travelled throughout Canada and the United States, working at a wide variety of jobs, before settling in Montreal in 2012. The Music Game, her first book, won the prestigious Ringuet Prize of the Quebec Academy of Arts and Letters, the Quebec Arts Council's prize for a new work by a young artist, and the Adrienne Choquette Prize for short stories. It was a finalist for the Grand Prix du Livre de Montral and was included in Le Combat des livres, the French-language counterpart of Canada Reads.


JC Sutcliffe is a writer and translator. Her most recent translations include Worst Case, We Get Married by Sophie Bienvenu and Mama's Boy Behind Bars by David Goudreault. She has lived in England, France and Canada.

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