THE DEGENERATES was a fever dream of a read and I've been thinking about it for months.
If you're a lit fic reader but you feel like you've been in a bit of a slump, this is the book to grab. It's very Big Brain™️ Lit Fic and classically character-driven, but it's also weirdly mesmerising and has a really steady pulse that gives it a sense of urgency you don't often find in the genre's typically 'quieter' reads. It is very much not Skins (UK) but in a lot of ways the reading experience felt a lot like the first two seasons (in a very good way, I am a Skins apologist).
To plagiarise myself — pulsing and hallucinatory, THE DEGENERATES is a visceral and stylish novel that reveals a story of human connection and loneliness. It follows three characters and the ways that their messy lives intersect and weave around each other, and their lives are kind of all over the place. It examines grief, abuse, generational trauma, mental illness, and poverty, but it also delivers some solid (dark) giggles.
The writing style is also super interesting with huuuuge chunks that do so much for the Reading Experience ™ to manipulate the physical way that we read in line with the emotional and psychological experience of reading.
I've genuinely never read a book like this before and I cannot WAIT to discuss it with people.
The Asian Australian debut game is strong this year and we love to see it.
The Degenerates
An electrifying debut from a young Indian-Australian writer, The Degenerates brims with vitality and humour.
Following the interwoven lives of four characters across India, Australia and the United States, the novel takes root in Melbourne and brings its streets, shopping centres and laneways to life with astounding originality-the city may never be the same again.
The Degenerates radiates with Titch's fanaticism and Ginny's obsessions. Somnath's devastating history reflects every life divided around the globe. And Maha, the heart of the novel, is an extraordinary creation, an abiding figure of modern salvation. Brimming with vitality, humour, intelligence and brilliant writing, The Degenerates engages with the realities of modern loneliness and every form of departure — from our homes, from our families and even from life itself.
In propulsive prose, The Degenerates summons the power of storytelling, disrupts conventional narratives and pays tribute to those lives often lost in the margins.
'The Degenerates is vivid, wild and even prophetic. It left me in awe. Raeden Richardson is the real deal.' - Robbie Arnott, author of Limberlost
Other reviewed titles
When Sleeping Women Wake
Mad World: The Politics of Mental Health
One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This
Wild Seed (Patternist #1)
The Prince Without Sorrow (Obsidian Throne #1)
Last Night at the Telegraph Club
Legendborn (The Legendborn Cycle #1)
The Midnight Timetable
Toward Eternity
Son of the Morning
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