Charlotte Wood is the author of five novels and two books of non-fiction. The Natural Way of Things won the Stella Prize, the Indie Book of the Year and Indie Novel of the Year. This and other books have been shortlisted for many prizes including the Miles Franklin, Christina Stead and Queensland Literary Awards. The Australian described her as 'one of our most original and provocative writers'. She lives in Sydney.
Charlotte Wood's shocking feminist dystopia, sees 10 women, all of
whom have been involved in sex scandals with powerful men, held in
a remote prison in Australia. Beautiful and savage - think Atwood
in the outback.
*Observer*
This is not psychological fiction but a horror parable; a portrait
not of people, but of tendencies. Seen as mythical archetypes, the
characters are only too frighteningly real...The Natural Way of
Things is chillingly dark and unfashionably didactic. But it's also
compulsively readable, and bears its load of significance with
effortless power. The fury of contemporary feminism may have found
its masterpiece of horror.
*Guardian*
A haunting parable of contemporary misogyny...Ms Wood's writing is
direct and spare, yet capable of bursting with unexpected
beauty.
*Economist*
A heavy, traumatic yet thrilling read... The Natural Way of Things
had me gripped from beginning to end... It strongly appealed to my
feminist nature and had me questioning our social standpoints....
An eye-opener in true form.
*Grazia*
This is an extraordinary novel: inspired, powerful, at once
coherent and dreamlike.
*Sydney Morning Herald, Best Books of 2015*
A confronting and blazing read... A novel to provoke thought,
conversation, disgust, anger and concern, a work that will haunt
the reader with its poetry and the stark truths buried within
Wood's brilliant exploration of a toxic culture in extremis.
*Weekend Australian*
A virtuoso performance, plotted deftly through a minefield of
potential traps, weighted with allegory yet swift and sure in its
narrative advance.
*Sydney Review of Books*
A dystopian fable, both gripping and lyrical.
*The Saturday Age, Best Books of 2015*
A moving, mesmerising and brilliantly topical interrogation of
misogyny that demands to be read at a sitting.
*Adelaide Advertiser*
Bold, provocative, startling and insightful, The Natural Way of
Things is what fiction should be.
*The Newtown Review of Books*
[A] Confronting, confounding novel of mysteriously kidnapped and
imprisoned women.
*The Australian, Best Books of 2015*
The kind of book you inhale in a sitting... Stark prose and
unrelenting pace.
*The Saturday Paper, Best Books of 2015*
How each character copes with their unusual incarceration is
fascinating. The language is beautiful... Charlotte Wood's is a
unique, original voice that soothes and shocks in equal measures in
this pitch-perfect dystopian nightmare.
*Townsville Bulletin*
Exposing the threads of misogyny, cowardice and abuses of power
embedded in contemporary society, this is a confronting, sometimes
deeply painful novel to read. With an unflinching eye and audacious
imagination, Charlotte Wood carries us from a nightmare of
helplessness and despair to a fantasy of revenge and reckoning.
*Guardian*
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