In her first novel in fifteen years, Helen Garner writes about the joys and limits of female friendship under the transforming pressure of illness. The clear-eyed grace of her prose in this darkly funny and unsparing novel has been hailed by Peter Carey as the work of a great writer. Garlanded with awards, dazzling reviewers around the globe, The Spare Room is destined to be a modern literary classic.
Helen Garner was born in Geelong, Australia, in 1942. Her award-winning books, including The Spare Room, Monkey Grip, The First Stone, and Joe Cinque's Consolation, include novels, stories, screenplays, and works of nonfiction. She lives in Australia.
Writer and Teacher Mostly poems by young people. Contact kate@kateclanchy.com
@lizharris72 Go for it. Have you read The Spare Room by Helen Garner?
Late coffee and oranges in a sunny chair ** One half of Edmison Harper Literary Scouting (@EdmisonHarper)
@wychstreet Also, Helen Garner’s The Spare Room is great but for sense of place, definitely MacFarlane.
Hariett Gilbert is a writer and host of BBC's World Book Club..
@JanetEmson O Caledonia by Elspeth Barker; The Girls of Slender Means &/or The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, Muriel Spark; Requiem, Antonio Tabucchi; The Spare Room, Helen Garner; Giovanni's Room, James Baldwin; Lady Into Fox, David Garnett; A Whole Life, Robert Seethaler....
"My favorite discovery of the year." --Anne Enright
"Luminous. . . It reminds us that literature not only can, but must, address the most important subjects, because it does so in ways no other form can." --Claire Messud, Newsweek
"Garner is perhaps most easily introduced to new American readers as the Joan Didion of Australia--a person who writes with a diamond drill, depicting human relationships with such brutal clarity they seem to be rendered for the first time." --April Smith, Los Angeles Times
"A Molotov cocktail of a book. . . Her voice is full of unexpected humor." --Emily Carter, Minneapolis Star-Tribune
"A book so sensitive, sad, funny, and alive that it surely deserves an honored place on many shelves." --Diana Athill, The Daily Telegraph (UK)
"Two women who have known each other for fifteen years, spending three weeks together with the weight of one crushing disease. How do we calculate what's important in our lives? Highly recommended." --Bette-Lee Fox, Library Journal (starred review)
"Only great fiction demands us to reset our moral compass and look at our value coordinates all over again. The Spare Room achieves this." --Neel Mukherjee, The Times (UK)