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The Town
Paperback

The Town

$29.99
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A new edition of Shaun Prescott's internationally acclaimed debut novel, first published in 2017.

Accompanies Prescott's follow-up, Bon and Lesley, released by Giramondo in September 2022.

It is a town of dwindling fortunes: of petrol stations and fast-food outlets, shopping centres and cul-de-sacs, radio stations with no listeners, buses empty of passengers - a town believed by its inhabitants to have no history of its own. When a young writer arrives to research a book about disappearing towns in regional New South Wales, he falls into the futile rhythms of the place. Then, an outbreak of mysterious holes starts to appear - a mysterious, growing oblivion that threatens to erase the town's already marginal existence.

Shaun Prescott's unsettling, quietly luminous debut has drawn comparisons to Kafka and Calvino, Murnane and Macauley. At once deadpan and hypnotic, realist and surreal, it explores the disquiet that lurks at the heart of Australia's buried history, and considers what kind of identity can be found in a place on the verge of becoming nowhere.

Praise for The Town:

'This novel signals its author as someone who understands what literature is for. It is one of the strongest and strangest contemporary Australian novels I've seen.' - Sydney Morning Herald

'This is a book that creeps up on the reader: all of a sudden you're swept away by, even bound to, this thing that's so mournful, intense and unsettling. It will stay with me.' - Lisa McInerney

'A powerfully doomy debut...Intelligently alive to its own metaphorical possibilities, leaving behind a powerful vision of the world ending, not with a bang, but a whimper.' - The Guardian

'One of those rare books that bothers your thinking by making you feel uncomfortable without necessarily knowing why or how. The aftermath is a kind of free-fall. It's a remarkable achievement.' - The Australian

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Giramondo Publishing Co
Country
Australia
Date
1 February 2023
Pages
256
ISBN
9781922725387

A new edition of Shaun Prescott's internationally acclaimed debut novel, first published in 2017.

Accompanies Prescott's follow-up, Bon and Lesley, released by Giramondo in September 2022.

It is a town of dwindling fortunes: of petrol stations and fast-food outlets, shopping centres and cul-de-sacs, radio stations with no listeners, buses empty of passengers - a town believed by its inhabitants to have no history of its own. When a young writer arrives to research a book about disappearing towns in regional New South Wales, he falls into the futile rhythms of the place. Then, an outbreak of mysterious holes starts to appear - a mysterious, growing oblivion that threatens to erase the town's already marginal existence.

Shaun Prescott's unsettling, quietly luminous debut has drawn comparisons to Kafka and Calvino, Murnane and Macauley. At once deadpan and hypnotic, realist and surreal, it explores the disquiet that lurks at the heart of Australia's buried history, and considers what kind of identity can be found in a place on the verge of becoming nowhere.

Praise for The Town:

'This novel signals its author as someone who understands what literature is for. It is one of the strongest and strangest contemporary Australian novels I've seen.' - Sydney Morning Herald

'This is a book that creeps up on the reader: all of a sudden you're swept away by, even bound to, this thing that's so mournful, intense and unsettling. It will stay with me.' - Lisa McInerney

'A powerfully doomy debut...Intelligently alive to its own metaphorical possibilities, leaving behind a powerful vision of the world ending, not with a bang, but a whimper.' - The Guardian

'One of those rare books that bothers your thinking by making you feel uncomfortable without necessarily knowing why or how. The aftermath is a kind of free-fall. It's a remarkable achievement.' - The Australian

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Giramondo Publishing Co
Country
Australia
Date
1 February 2023
Pages
256
ISBN
9781922725387
 
Book Review

The Town
by Shaun Prescott

by Chris Somerville, Jul 2017

It’s telling how a novel sets up, and answers, its mysteries. I’ve always preferred the ones that don’t sacrifice plot for character or vice-versa, and instead meet somewhere in the middle. The Town, the first novel by Australian author Shaun Prescott, hits this particular sweet spot, giving us a book that’s both incredibly strange and incredibly gripping in equal measure.

The novel starts with its unnamed narrator moving to a small Australian town, where he’s stacking shelves at one of its many supermarkets and working on a book about disappearing towns in the area. He has trouble convincing the townsfolk of these places, since they no longer exist, even as the town they’re in is slowly edging towards the same fate. Alongside his research into disappearing towns, the narrator drinks beer at an empty pub, hangs out with his flatmate Rob’s girlfriend, while she distributes cassette tapes around town, rides the town’s only bus (which no one ever catches), and frets about being bashed for no reason by a townsperson he doesn’t know named Steve Sanders. The Town is a novel filled with outsiders: people who suddenly find themselves adults even though they still feel like they’re teenagers, a music scene wholly invented by a radio host who has no listeners, and a seasonal disco that inevitably turns into a huge brawl every time it’s held.

Prescott has a real skill of presenting the banality of everyday life in a way that is wholly original and strange, but his real achievement here is that each aspect of this novel is expertly balanced, and the distanced tone manages to make the story’s most bizarre aspects seem commonplace. It’s hard to imagine that we’ll get a more original Australian novel this year.


Chris Somerville

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