Thirteen years after her celebrated debut, the author returns with a bizarre, evocative work that merges science and the surrealRomy Ash’s debut novel, Floundering, has sat on my bookshelf since the Sydney Morning Her...
See moreThirteen years after her celebrated debut, the author returns with a bizarre, evocative work that merges science and the surreal
Romy Ash’s debut novel, Floundering, has sat on my bookshelf since the Sydney Morning Herald, where I worked as literary editor, named her as one of the best young Australian novelists in 2013 – the year she was shortlisted for the Miles Franklin literary award among others.
The Australian author Cate Kennedy wrote of the neglected young brothers in Floundering: “These boys are so real you will lie awake worrying about them” – words so true that I still feel anxious for them.
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Thirteen years after her celebrated debut, the author returns with a bizarre, evocative work that merges science and the surrealRomy Ash’s debut novel, Floundering, has sat on my bookshelf since the Sydney Morning Her...
See more