Heidi Sopinka is the author of The Dictionary of Animal Languages, which was shortlisted for the Kobo Writing Emerging Writer Prize, and longlisted for the Royal Society of Literature Ondaatje Prize. A former environment columnist at The Globe and Mail, she is co-founder and co-designer at Horses Atelier. Her writing has won a national magazine award and has appeared in The Paris Review, The Believer, Brick, and Lit Hub, and has been anthologised in Art Essays. She lives in Toronto.
"Utopia is a marvel. Vividly beguiling on art, love, and what it
means to be alive, every page thrums with magic."
--Sophie Mackintosh, author of The Water Cure "Utopia is a bird's
eye view of the desires of the human heart ... through characters
who feel and live deeply at the boundaries of art and life.
Sopinka's luminescent prose tackles the danger and vitality of
artistic and bodily desire under the politically charged structures
of masculine power ... with rawness, deep awareness, and
razor-sharp critique ... This is an urgent book."
--Angélique Lalonde, author of Glorious Frazzled Beings "These
brilliant and bold artists explode off the page as they try to
transcend the boundaries of the material world in their work. But
the most dangerous waters they must navigate are those of the
male-dominated world of the 1970s, which erases their art and
identities. Sopinka explores the minefield that is loving men in an
oppressively patriarchal world. And she captures the volatility and
power of female friendships, and the uncharted maps of women's
untameable artistic drives."
--Heather O'Neill, author of When We Lost Our Heads "Utopia is
interested in life as performance, in the ways that we attempt to
transcend our own bodies, and in what it means to be a woman artist
in a world that is run by and for men. Set against the backdrop of
the arid California desert, full of scalding cups of diner coffee
and burning tarmac highways, this is a book as seething as its
parts."
--Saba Sams, author of Send Nudes "With tense and glittering
writing, Heidi Sopinka's Utopia blasts the dry desert sun onto the
lives and afterlives of a circle of Californian artists, the women
they are and the women they love. This is a thrilling book about
artistic inheritance, jealousies, and affinities."
--Leanne Shapton, author of Guestbook and Swimming Studies "Tense,
sexy, and uncanny. Utopia shimmers with desert heat and burns with
atmosphere. It's Rebecca meets Zabriskie Point. Luminous."
--Francesca Reece, author of Voyeur "Utopia is a searing novel
about art, ownership, and the entanglement of power and
performance. Heidi Sopinka's sentences have a bluish-orange
intensity, a captivating energy that conjures a desert at
dusk."
--Makenna Goodman, author of The Shame "Utopia is a study in
contrasts: tart and poetic; sensitive and wild; bright and spooky
like the LA light. It drove me onward; it let me linger. It made me
angry; it inspired me. Above all, it clinches what we all suspected
from The Dictionary of Animal Languages--Heidi Sopinka is a crazy
good writer. I'd follow her anywhere."
--Lauren Elkin, author of Flâneuse "I was transfixed by Heidi
Sopinka's incandescent prose. It blazed through me and touched my
heart in the deepest, most tender place. Utopia is about a powerful
bond between mother and daughter; the collision of art,
performance, and female friendships; and how grief shapes our
ability to love and hope. Sexy, devastating, and wise--this novel
will make you feel alive."
--Sanaë Lemoine, author of The Margot Affair "Utopia cleverly
investigates layers of social issues: feminism and its
intersections with race and class; gender roles in life and in art;
women's relationships; the artist's relationship to commerce and
social justice ... [Sopinka] excels in characterization and the
evocation of the power of creation."
--Shelf Awareness "Sopinka's mesmerizing latest ... stages a story
of obsession in the 1970s Los Angeles art world ... This
page-turner doubles as a love letter to the daring women on the
fringes of art history."
--Publishers Weekly "Heidi Sopinka returns with flawless prose and
aching atmosphere in this hypnotic exploration of art, power,
ownership, and identity. Utopia solidifies Sopinka as an artist at
the top of her game--unafraid to be equal parts tender and cutting
in her musings on feminine relationships. This book is devastating
in the most beautiful way possible."
--Laura Graveline, Brazos Bookstore "In the male-dominated
California art scene of the 1970s, Paz, an emerging young female
artist, is haunted. Haunted by her new husband's dead wife, a
rising artist who died suspiciously, leaving behind both a baby and
a mystery. Haunted by her own impostor syndrome, after essentially
inheriting someone else's life. Haunted by the men in control and
the women she doesn't feel equal to. Moody, atmospheric, tense,
feminist, and moving. I loved immersing myself in this unique world
and quietly powerful novel."
--Seth Tucker, Carmichael's Bookstore "This book opens with two
parents leaving their baby in a dresser drawer at a gallerist's
holiday party and gets that isn't even the most uncomfortable
scene. Read if you like 1970s feminist critiques and female
artists' unique and universal struggles"
--Ivory Owl Reviews "Throughout, Sopinka's matter-of-fact, almost
dead-pan, narration is juxtaposed with penetrating, dramatic
dialogues. Her great strength is in recording how people strike off
each other, then strike out at each other."
--Mark Thomas, The Canberra Times "This is what you get if you
steep de Maurier's, Rebecca in sex, drugs, and turpentine and stick
it in the 1970s desert art world. Shimmering with sweat and
rippling with obsession and grief (over people, art, obsolescence),
the women in this book bristle against the collectivist art world
and its misogyny, each of them trying to make their mark in radical
performance art, each of them stifled by choices their own and not.
In turns unsettling and violent, these characters reckon with their
insecurities, both the internal failures of new motherhood and the
external pressures to disappear and let the men in their lives
thrive. Character-driven, with palpable rage and unbridled
self-reflection, the narrative stews in themes and vibes."
--Epilogue Books Chocolate Brews
Praise for The Dictionary of Animal Languages: "The Dictionary of
Animal Languages is such a special book, suffused with an almost
painterly intelligence. Sopinka's characters experience the world
with an intensity we associate with children and visionaries.
Watching them navigate the difficulties of the humdrum and the
glamorous both is a distinctive, if unsettling, pleasure."
--Rivka Galchen, author of American Innovations and Atmospheric
Disturbances "A stunning novel with quiet, prayerful prose to take
your breath away. Sopinka flawlessly inhabits the rich inner world
of her characters as if she could shed her own skin. Powerful in a
soft way, like the static electricity before a storm."
--Laura Graveline, Brazos Bookstore, Houston, TX "With stunning
prose, lavish details, deep wisdom, and emotional precision,
reading this book is like falling in love--my interest in
everything else was lost."
--Claire Cameron, author of The Last Neanderthal "Elements in the
book build and shift, weaving together to create a vivid and
powerfully human reckoning of a life, of aging and loss, of a
century of conflict, and of the relationship between the natural
and the industrial world."
--Toronto Star "[Leonora Carrington's] life inspired Heidi
Sopinka's debut novel, The Dictionary of Animal Languages."
--New York Times Style Magazine "The legendary Leonora Carrington
is reimagined as the reclusive, ninety year-old painter Ivory
Frame, who is quietly at work at a dictionary of animal languages
when she finds out that she has a granddaughter she didn't know
of--a turn of events as disorientating as surrealism itself, as
Ivory never actually had a child."
--Courtney Maum, Book Riot, "12 Novels about Historical Women to
Inspire a Better Future" "Made me push past my own expectations of
literature."
--Nichole Perkins, The 2019 Tournament of Books "[T]he language of
Sopinka's Dictionary ... makes me feel I'm walking through lush
dreamscapes from an art museum's walls."
--Rion Amilcar Scott, The 2019 Tournament of Books "[R]ead it in
two sittings, and completely enjoyed myself ... the depth to which
I could slip into Ivory's point of view, the rhythms of her
emotional responses, was a dealmaker for me. And the fact that the
story's way of evincing feeling and thought felt more evoked than
stated--there was just so much in this novel that held me."
--Rosecrans Baldwin, The 2019 Tournament of Books "Sopinka isn't
just a terrific writer, she's a great thinker. Her writing has
particular sway and grace when she writes about the natural
world."
--Christy Heron-Clark, The 2019 Tournament of Books "Not only a
dictionary of animal language, but also an atlas of the human
heart, Heidi Sopinka's gorgeous debut novel maps the difficult
territory between history and memory, love and loss."
--Johanna Skibsrud, author of The Sentimentalists "A rich,
painterly novel, a space where image and sound and the powers of
the written word meet and mingle."
--Brixton Review of Books "[T]ransfixing."
--AnOther Magazine "The Dictionary of Animal Languages shifts
between past and present, across beautifully-rendered landscapes
and soundscapes. In the foreground in sharp focus, an inner world,
the story of a woman's life, a life spent in rebellion from
society, domesticity, and definition. Sensual and sensory, this is
a story about the strength of the human spirit and it is about
bodies, desire, and irrevocable loss, told in prose that is fresh,
urgent and lyrical. A passionate and compelling debut."
--Anna Thomasson, author of A Curious Friendship "[A] brilliant
book."
--In The Moment "Masterfully written in expressive prose, The
Dictionary of Animal Languages is a tale of an artist's life
outlining love and loss and the surprises, both good and bad, that
were thrown in her path. It is full of keen observations which are
almost meditative, perhaps an indication of the artist's ability to
appreciate beauty and small details, especially in nature, which
give continued meaning to life even when events turn tragic."
--Carina Mcnally, Irish Examiner "[P]atient readers will find, as I
did, that a bit of mystery about what exactly happened is just
enough bait to keep them going until they've gotten to know Ivory
so well that the last third or so of the book is emotionally
devastating in the best way. This book is a powerful and
brilliantly constructed story about loss, love, and communication
of all types."
--Annie Smith, Utah Valley University Library, Edelweiss "The
writing is poetic and powerful ... the language is full of imagery
and energy, active and fresh. Sopinka has her own grammar, using
sentence fragments in moments of urgency."
--Tonstant Weader Reviews, five stars "A beautifully odd book that
needs and deserves time to seep into the reader's bones."
--Sunday Independent "Tinged with horror, Utopia creates a terse
and tightly wound artistic mystery."
--Cameron Woodhead, The Sydney Morning Herald
"This book opens with two parents leaving their baby in a dresser
drawer at a gallerist's holiday party and gets that isn't even the
most uncomfortable scene. Read if you like 1970s feminist critiques
and female artists' unique and universal struggles."--Ivory Owl
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