
Barn 8 by Deb Olin Unferth
An unforgettably exuberant and potent novel by a writer at the height of her powers
'Barn 8 is a novel like no other: An urgent moral fantasia, a post-human parable, a tender portrait of animal dignity and genius' Dana Spiotta ---- 'Deb Olin Unferth's hilarious genius is on dazzling display in this novel. Come for the brilliant insights about our faltering civilization. Stay for the revolutionaries and the chickens. You are really really going to love these chickens . . .' Jenny Offill ----'Full of grit, humour and tenderness.' Baya Simons, Financial Times ----'Aesthetically perfect and philosophically profound . . . the chicken-related writing is a force unto itself.' Sandra Newman, The Guardian Book of the Day ----'Written with vim and wit, Barn 8 is a highly enjoyable treatment of a worthwhile social issue.' Anthony Cummins, The Observer----'Non-chronological and ornithological, it leaps forwards to a charred and toxic future when chickens have outlived mankind, and back to the first fowls who shared the planet with dinosaurs.' Jakob Hofmann, The TLS----'[Unferth's] prose is intricate and vibrant . . . Characters are brightly drawn, dialogue is snappy. [Barn 8] reads like a comi-tragic manifesto of our age.' Sarah Gilmartin, Irish Times ----'Barn 8 is a slyly effective absurdist comment on a country that consumes a staggering 75 billion eggs a year.' Claire Allfree, Daily Mail ----'A wild and pacey novel [that] also contains complex depths. Unferth is a playful and digressive writer with a keen psychological insight.'Nick Major, Herald Scotland ----'Utterly absorbing . . . brilliantly executed. A contender for book of the year.' New Internationalist ----'Unferth deftly balances [the horrors of the American egg industry] with a playful tone and a rich lattice of viewpoints and insights . . . she sets out to capture everything, from the life of the individual hen to the churn of the natural world.' Rebecca Cook, Literary Review ----'A daring writer of wit, imagination, and conscience, Unferth has transformed her foray into hen hell into an adroitly narrated, fast-paced, yet complexly dimensional novel about emotional and environmental devastation . . . Unferth sharply illuminates the contrariness of human nature, celebrates the evolutionary marvels of chickens, and exposes the horrors of the egg industry . . . [A] vividly provoking and revelatory work of ecofiction spiked with mordant humor and powered by love.' Booklist, starred review----'Ignited by her fiery wit and distinctive voice, Unferth's novel uses one of America's most valuable and overlooked institutions as fertile ground to raise questions around the truths people are fed and the ones they turn a blind eye to. . . Unferth's writing never feels patronizing-more than anything, it's galvanizing. . . If this novel isn't a movement, it has enough heart to start one.' Kirkus Reviews, starred review----'In this outrageous piece of rural noir and pitch-perfect characterization, Unferth recalls Edward Abbey's The Monkey Wrench Gang with a dose of vegan-minded quirk. This entertaining, satisfying genre turn shows off Unferth's range, and readers will be delighted by the characters' earnest crusade.' Publishers Weekly, starred review---- 'Like Flannery O'Connor, Deb Olin Unferth does things entirely her own way, and that way is impossible to describe. . . . This very funny and absurd novel is also as serious as the world.' Zachary Lazar ---- 'I leap to read anything Deb Olin Unferth writes, and her latest book, Barn 8, is further proof of her singular talent, her gigantic heart. While Unferth's characters try to save hens, her miracle of a novel might, in turn, save you.' R.O. Kwon, author of The Incendiaries ----Praise for Wait Till you See me Dance ----'This assemblage of down-and-out moments is delivered with a wit and concision reminiscent of Lydia Davis and Diane Williams, a wry intelligence and keen irony that don't prevent Unferth's prose from offering deep emotional intimacy. . . . Unferth's book is rich with surprises, small and large. . . . Again and again in these pages, Unferth swerves from the mundane to the extraordinary, from biting to soaringly celebratory, often in a single sentence.' The New York Times Book Review ----'One of the most important voices in fiction's long-awaited collection of short fiction is a fascinating must-read.' Newsweek---- '[Unferth's] absurd and tender story collection is full of sentences like clear glass doors, and you, reader, are the bird. . . . The way she writes [her characters] is reminiscent of the unsentimental, often absurd, compassion of George Saunders. . . . The multiplicity of feeling is wonderful; it's like she's swirling all these different colors of paint together but stops while it's all still just thinly marbled together.' NPR ---- 'No one can resist Unferth's masterful distortion of the American dream with a set of unforgettable mistake-makers who aren't quite past redemption.' Courtney Maum, CNN Travel
Deb Olin Unferth is the author of six books, most recently Barn 8, which is her UK debut. She has received fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and Creative Capital, has won three Pushcart Prizes, and was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. An associate professor at the University of Texas in Austin, she also teaches creative writing at a prison in southern Texas.
| SKU | Unavailable |
| ISBN 13 | 9781911508885 |
| ISBN 10 | 1911508881 |
| Title | Barn 8 |
| Author | Deb Olin Unferth |
| Condition | Unavailable |
| Binding Type | Paperback |
| Publisher | And Other Stories |
| Year published | 2020-04-09 |
| Number of pages | 304 |
| Cover note | Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary. |
| Note | Unavailable |