Hot Stew: the new novel from the Booker-shortlisted author of Elmet

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Hot Stew: the new novel from the Booker-shortlisted author of Elmet
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Fiona Mozley
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:320
Dimensions(mm): Height 232,Width 152
Category/GenreModern and contemporary fiction (post c 1945)
ISBN/Barcode 9781529327212
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher John Murray Press
Imprint John Murray Publishers Ltd
Publication Date 18 March 2021
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

'Ambitious, clever, brilliant and very funny . . . If Elmet announced the arrival of a bright new voice in British literature, Hot Stew confirms Mozley as a writer of extraordinary empathic gifts' Observer 'A dazzling Dickensian tale . . . In an age when so many novelists of Mozley's generation take refuge in the dystopian, she has reinvigorated large-scale social realism for our times ' Guardian, Book of the Day 'Where the mystical, elemental qualities of Elmet earned it comparisons with Lawrence and Hardy, her second novel is a sprawling urban comedy more likely to recall Ben Jonson or Dickens' Daily Telegraph 'Did you know in Tudor times all the brothels were south of the river in Southwark and it was only much later that they moved up this way to Soho. Stews, they were called then.' Pungent, steamy, insatiable Soho; the only part of London that truly never sleeps. Tourists dawdling, chancers skulking, addicts shuffling, sex workers strutting, punters prowling, businessmen striding, the homeless and the lost. Down Wardour Street, ducking onto Dean Street, sweeping into L'Escargot, darting down quiet back alleyways, skirting dumpsters and drunks, emerging on to raucous main roads, fizzing with energy and riotous with life. On a corner, sits a large townhouse, the same as all its neighbours. But this building hosts a teeming throng of rich and poor, full from the basement right up to the roof terrace. Precious and Tabitha call the top floors their home but it's under threat; its billionaire-owner Agatha wants to kick the women out to build expensive restaurants and luxury flats. Men like Robert, who visit the brothel, will have to go elsewhere. Those like Cheryl, who sleep in the basement, will have to find somewhere else to hide after dark. But the women won't go quietly. Soho is their turf and they are ready for a fight. 'A complex mosaic of urban life . . . The Soho Mozley captures with such intensity is not a mere locality. It is a microcosm of swarming humanity' The Times 'At its best, it recalls the kind of capacious, rollicking satires Britain produced in and around the Thatcher era - ambitious, scathing and damn good fun' TLS

Author Biography

Fiona Mozley grew up in York and lives in Edinburgh. Her first novel, Elmet, won a Somerset Maugham Award and the Polari Prize. It was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize and the Royal Society of Literature Ondaatje Prize, and longlisted for the Women's Prize for Fiction, the Dublin Literary Award and the International Dylan Thomas Prize. In 2018 Fiona Mozley was shortlisted for the Sunday Times/PFD Young Writer of the Year Award.

Reviews

Ambitious, clever, brilliant and very funny . . . If Elmet announced the arrival of a bright new voice in British literature, Hot Stew confirms Mozley as a writer of extraordinary empathic gifts * Observer * A dazzling Dickensian tale * Guardian, Book of the Day * A complex mosaic of urban life * The Times * A rollicking tale * Alex Preston, Observer * There's no evidence of difficult second-novel syndrome here . . . a pure nostalgia trip * Daily Mail * A gripping novel bursting with life. The second novel by the Booker-shortlisted novelist is a real treat * Sunday Times * Ambitious, scathing and damn good fun * TLS * A sprawling novel of London life packed with picaresque characters * Evening Standard * Where the mystical, elemental qualities of Elmet earned it comparisons with Lawrence and Hardy, her second novel is a sprawling urban comedy more likely to recall Ben Jonson or Dickens * Daily Telegraph * Mozley's prose is precise, controlled, unshowy, deceptively readable * Herald * Despite so many characters, the novel doesn't flail, it succeeds as a force . . . to direct so many through a labyrinthine story in just over 300 pages is a kind of mastery * Irish Times * A lively, pacy read that gives more than a nod to Dickens and is all the better for it * Sunday Independent Review * A lively, pacy read * Irish Independent * Mozley's Soho is a village populated by a cast of characters as vivid and memorable as any imagined by Dickens * Louise Kennedy * Hot Stew reads like a great night out in a city that never sleeps * Jan Carson * Her new stew is such a steaming, fuming mix of life, lust and London that in the end you feel like you've eaten all of Soho * Hallgrimur Helgason, author of The Woman at 1000 Degrees * Affecting and bitterly comic prose . . . rollicking, heady vivacity * Big Issue *