New York Times bestseller Lauren Groff returns with a new book as bold and consuming as her novel Fates and Furies.
Lauren Groff is a three-time National Book Award finalist and the New York Times bestselling author of four novels, The Monsters of Templeton, Arcadia, Fates and Furies and Matrix, and two short story collections, Delicate Edible Birds and Florida. She has won The Story Prize and been a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. Her work regularly appears in the New Yorker, the Atlantic and elsewhere, and she was named one of Granta's 2017 Best Young American Novelists.
Florida is a magnificent collection, executed with tremendous depth
and precision, unsettling in the best possible way. Lauren Groff is
a virtuoso.
Don’t tell yourself you don’t like short stories, because these are
not to be missed. The book is deep and dark and resonant. Every
story plays in some way on the others and in the end the total is
worth even more than the sum of its beautiful parts.
It’s beautiful. It’s giving me rich, grand nightmares.
*Observer*
Florida feels innovative and terribly relevant. Any one of its
stories is a bracing read; together they form a masterpiece.
*Stylist*
This is what she shows in story after story: a heroic pushback
against the way we live now, against waste, against the artificial
environments in which we find ourselves maintained by corporations,
but equally against the pressures on women to be flawless,
effortlessly excellent mothers, wives, sisters, lovers, friends,
within this dire state of affairs … Groff’s lyrical and oblique
stories catch these women in the midst of becoming aware of their
complicity in perpetuating these narratives – to which their
response is to walk, flee, or conversely refuse to budge, as in the
dazzlingly apocalyptic ‘Eyewall’ … The hot, humid Floridian
atmosphere hangs over all the stories … Every woman, every snake,
is fighting back against the laws of nature, and the human-made
Eden that threatens to imprison, or end, them all.
*Guardian*
A lushly evocative collection of stories about the Sunshine State,
its inhabitants and its history … Mesmerising … In her previous
book, Fates and Furies — which was picked by Barack Obama as his
favourite read of 2015 — Groff painted a psychologically rich
portrait of a marriage as told from both sides. She brings the same
attention to detail to Florida, in a multifaceted portrayal of both
the state and its inhabitants … The Florida winter wraps itself
around “camellias and peach trees and dogwoods and oranges”, but it
is the summer she captures so well … She’s a writer whose turn of
phrase can stop you in your tracks … Something untameable lurks
restlessly beneath the surface of this book. Groff’s incomparable
prose pulsates with peril; its beauty, like that of the titular
state itself, lies in a certain wild lushness.
*Financial Times*
The collection testifies to Groff’s brilliance as a writer of both
places and people. She grapples with interpersonal relations and
the inner lives of others with perceptiveness, wit and emotional
engagement.
*Literary Review*
Easily the year’s best story collection . . . these indelibly vivid
tales read like inoculations against cynicism.
*Vogue*
She is an example of writers who can do everything – dialogue,
structure, the throb and hum of inner life – so brilliantly. The
result is so heady and evocative, you’ll be wafting away imaginary
heat waves and checking your room for scaly threats as you read,
while Florida’s cast of lost, sad and sometimes cruel characters
will stick with you far longer.
*Esquire UK*
An unsettling, stinging collection that feeds on Florida’s
paradoxes.
*Sunday Times*
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