Natasha Brown is a British novelist. She was a 2019 London Writers Award recipient and a 2022 Burgess Fellow at the University of Manchester's Centre for New Writing. Her debut novel Assembly was shortlisted for the Folio Prize, the Goldsmiths Prize and the Orwell Prize for Fiction.
Diamond-sharp, timely and urgent... Written in a distilled,
minimalist prose, Assembly is illuminating on everything from micro
aggressions in the workplace, to the reality of living in the
"hostile environment", to the legacy of British colonialism
*Observer, Best Debuts of 2021*
A quiet, measured call to revolution. It's about everything that
has changed and still needs to change, socially, historically,
politically, personally... Its impact is massive; it strikes me as
the kind of book that sits on the faultline between a before and an
after. I could use words like 'elegant' and 'brilliantly judged'
and literary antecedents such as Katherine Mansfield/Toni
Morrison/Claudia Rankine. But it's simpler than that. I'm full of
the hope, on reading it, that this is the kind of book that doesn't
just mark the moment things change, but also makes that change
possible
*Ali Smith, author of 'How to be both' and 'Summer'*
In just 100 pages Natasha Brown delivers a body blow of a book.
Assembly is extraordinary, each word weighed, each detail
meticulously crafted... Brown is mercilessly clear-eyed in her
delineation of how British culture is also "assembled" - its
history whitewashed and arguing against it near-impossible when
"the only tool of expression is the language of this place". Yet
she wields that language like a weapon and hits her mark again and
again with devastating elegance
*The Times*
Incredible. [Assembly] moves the English novel on. Slim book,
massive importance
*Max Porter, author of 'Grief is the Thing With Feathers'*
Stunning, blisteringly eloquent... Assembly heralds a powerful new
voice in British literature
*The Sunday Times*
Assembly is brilliant. Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway meets Citizen
by Claudia Rankine. Natasha Brown's ability to slide between the
tiniest, most telling detail and the edifice of history, the
assemblage of so many lives in so many times and places, is as
breathtakingly graceful as it is mercilessly true
*Olivia Sudjic, author of 'Asylum Road'*
Daring and distilled... A hauntingly accurate novel about the
stories we construct for ourselves and others... A completely
captivating read you won't be able to put down
*Independent*
Assembly fulfils, with exquisite precision, Virginia Woolf's
exhortation to "record the atoms as they fall upon the mind in the
order in which they fall... [It] calls to mind Frantz Fanon's work
on the psychic ruptures caused by the experience of being
colonised, or W. E. B. Du Bois's idea of double consciousness.
Assembly is the kind of novel we might have got if Woolf had
collaborated with Fanon... Brown nudges us towards an expression of
the inexpressible - towards feeling rather than thought, as if we
are navigating the collapsing boundaries between the narrator's
consciousness and our own
*Guardian*
I read it compulsively in a single sitting. Assembly expertly draws
out the difficulties of assembling a coherent self in the face of
myriad structural oppressions. Casting a wry look at faded
aristocrats, financial insiders and smug liberals, Natasha Brown
takes the conventional tics of the English novel - the repressed
emotion and clipped speech - and drains away the nostalgia. What's
left is something hard and true
*Will Harris, author of 'Mixed Race Superman' and 'Rendang'*
It more than lives up to the hype. Propulsive, devastating,
unflinching and deft... This is a heartbreaking novel that offers
glimmers of hope with its bold vision for new modes of
storytelling... Brown's voice is entirely her own - and Assembly is
a wry, explosive debut from a coruscating new talent
*inews*
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