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Body Friend

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks

SHORTLISTED FOR THE STELLA PRIZE
SHORTLISTED FOR THE UNIVERSITY OF QUEENSLAND FICTION BOOK AWARD
'an illuminating reflection on what it means to live with pain.' –Publishers Weekly
'Body Friend is a deeply intimate tribute to the fragile and porous self, written in prose of rare clarity and tenderness. I felt everything reading this book.'—Claire Thomas, author of The Performance and Fugitive Blue
'Body Friend is a novel that clings to the mind long after it finishes.' —ArtsHUB
'
a tender and raw novel about friendship, chronic pain and the healing power of water.' — Harper's Bazaar
'Katherine Brabon distinguished herself with her first novels, The Memory Artist and The Shut Ins, but she has surpassed these and reached an early career pinnacle with her enigmatically titled novel, Body Friend.'—Books + Publishing

Late in the summer five years ago, when I was recovering from a surgical procedure, I met two women within a few weeks of each other and I saw both of them regularly, always separately, for some months afterwards. Summer did not give way easily that year, and even so we must force our bodies down to sleep in the heat, and even if experience does not give itself up easily to representation, I will lay it down anyway; frame the raw and exigent weeks, the untrustworthy months after the hospital, render it and them, Frida and Sylvia, as closely as possible to reality—or whatever is the feelingof a life and mind lived inside a body.

A woman leaves the hospital after an operation and starts swimming in a pool in Melbourne's inner suburbs. There she meets Frida, who is uncannily like her in her experience of illness. Soon after, she meets another woman in a local park, Sylvia, who sees her pain and encourages her to rest.

The two new friends seem to be polar opposites: Frida adores the pool and the natural world, Sylvia clings to the protection of interior worlds. What begins as two seemingly simple friendships is challenged by what each woman asks of her, of themselves, and their bodies.

From the acclaimed author of The Memory Artist and The Shut Ins comes a new novel about the relationship between body and self, and how we must dive beneath the surface to really know ourselves.

PRAISE FOR BODY FRIEND:
'Body Friend shows that pain can be a friend and a friend can be a mirror, but what they reflect is more than just a mirror image, and contains many possibilities.' Sydney Morning Herald
'Body Friend is tender and expressive. Brabon's writing is exquisitely constructed. Her prose holds quiet emotional weight – putting the reader in mind, particularly, of Elena Ferrante's style – which is extraordinarily effective in capturing the lived realities of the body. Body Friend is a novel that clings to the mind long after it finishes.' —ArtsHUB
'Its language is startling for its poetic tendencies – it is rhythmic and observant, and liltingly musical – as well as its clarity and sharp concision. Brabon's prose is one of the deepest pleasures of the novel.' —The Saturday Paper

'The plot unfolds artfully and with precision to surprise and exceed readers' expectations.'—Books + Publishing
'Katherine Brabon's Body Friend is a tender ode to the recursive mysteries of the body and the need to find ourselves in other people. The narrator's pull between Frida and...

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 15, 2024
      A woman convalescing from an operation considers her relationship to her body, in Australian writer Brabon’s meditative U.S. debut. The unnamed narrator, a 20-something graduate student with an unspecified autoimmune disease, has a hip replacement to help her mobility. During hydrotherapy for her recovery, she meets Frida, a woman who is coping with a similar diagnosis, and sees herself in her new friend (“It was sufficient to be a body in pain and to know that about one another”). She begins meeting daily with Frida to swim, pleased with how the water makes movement easier. During a flare-up of her condition, however, she skips swimming and goes to the park. There, she meets Sylvia, another person with chronic pain. In contrast to Frida, Sylvia seems sullen and discourages movement in favor of silent rest. Over the next weeks, the narrator moves between these two extremes, torn between Frida’s rejection of limits and her “soul-level alignment” with Sylvia. The novel’s emotional core is heated by lyrical musings on the body and its relationship to language and narrative (“Often we deny the body its story. We don’t believe it or we ignore it, because the body does not use words”). This is an illuminating reflection on what it means to live with pain. Agent: Mary Krienke, Sterling Lord Literistic.

    • Books+Publishing

      July 25, 2023
      Katherine Brabon distinguished herself with her first novels, The Memory Artist and The Shut Ins, but she has surpassed these and reached an early career pinnacle with her enigmatically titled novel, Body Friend. If a novel about living with chronic illness sounds off-putting, do not be deterred. Body Friend is a sculptured, sensory reflection on pain told by an unnamed narrator about her suffering from an autoimmune disease. Her difficulties in trying to live a normal life are compounded by the disease’s invisibility. She has recently moved into an apartment with a balcony, a redolent liminal space, with Tomasz, her steadfast, energetic boyfriend, but the author unnerves us with hints that he may leave because of her debilitation. The narrator meets two doppelgangers, women who look like her and with whom her body and routines align. Strong Frida urges her to overcome weakness and exert herself in the pool. They form a ‘miraculous friendship’. Like the narrator, passive, sedentary Sylvia has swollen joints and encourages her to rest. We begin to question the motivations of these women. The narrator is a writer who values ‘story’, but her illness skews the narrative she wants to tell. The plot unfolds artfully and with precision to surprise and exceed readers’ expectations. Recommended for discerning readers of nuanced fiction such as Erin Hortle’s The Octopus and I, Madelaine Lucas’s Thirst for Salt and Meg Mason’s Sorrow and Bliss.

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