How to Be Human
Shortlisted for the Desmond Elliott Prize 2018
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- £4.99
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- £4.99
Publisher Description
SHORTLISTED FOR THE DESMOND ELLIOTT PRIZE 2018
'In evocative and elegant prose Cocozza delves deep into the psyche of a strange and troubled woman. The reader is invited to share in her intense connection to a fox and will admire the author’s mordantly witty dissection of contemporary manners.' -Sarah Perry, chair of Judges for Desmond Elliott Prize
You’ve seen a fox.
Come face to face in an unexpected place, or at an unexpected moment.
And he has looked at you, as you have looked at him. As if he has something to tell you, or you have something to tell him.
But what if it didn’t stop there?
When Mary arrives home from work one day to find a magnificent fox on her lawn - his ears spiked in attention and every hair bristling with his power to surprise - it is only the beginning. He brings gifts (at least, Mary imagines they are gifts), and gradually makes himself at home.
And as he listens to Mary, Mary listens back.
She begins to hear herself for the first time in years. Her bullish ex-boyfriend, still lurking on the fringes of her life, would be appalled. So would the neighbours with a new baby. They only like wildlife that fits with the decor. But inside Mary a wildness is growing that will not be tamed.
In this extraordinary debut, the lines between sanity and safety, obsession and delusion blur, in a thrilling exploration of what makes us human.
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'An intriguing and subversive debut, charged with the power of the ignored and the suppressed.' HILARY MANTEL
'Enchanting . . . restrained . . . startling.' TLS
'A thrilling psychodrama . . . She brilliantly captures a sense of Hitchcockian, curtain-twitching intensity.' Economist
‘Sharp, thoughtful . . . exhilarating . . . the plot slips from urban pastoral to tense thriller.’ Newsweek
'Cocozza has a wonderful eye for detail, and her descriptions of the natural world are uncanny.' Guardian
'The tricky, shifting substance of relationships is so insightfully drawn and constantly surprises.' Laura Barnett, author of The Versions of Us
'Taut, shimmering.' Richard Beard, author of The Acts of the Assassins
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Cocozza's excellent first novel slyly handles its relatively quiet premise: a woman, Mary, finds fulfillment in the bond she develops with a neighborhood fox. Taking place almost entirely on Mary's London property and in its neighboring woods, "an island of wilderness in the inner city," the novel revolves around territorial disputes between neighbors, between exes, and between humans and animals which accounts for the whiff of menace detectable throughout. Two males are "stalking periphery," a creepily solicitous ex-boyfriend named Mark and a fox, whom she one day spies sleeping curled on her lawn, "his head pok out from the bottom of the curve like an unfinished question mark." The creature will remain an enigmatic presence, undomesticated and ultimately illegible, even as the intimacy between him and Mary grows. Cocozza occasionally switches to the fox's point of view, brief, defamiliarizing glimpses that add a distinctive tang to the narrative. Here is the fox picking up a scent: "Salty snail odor tunneled into his muzzle. From the fresh male who was an old male who was a slithery male." The portrayal of that slithery male Mark vacillates between ominous stalker and harmless sad sack, an unsuitable foil to his vulpine rival. The magnificent and mysterious fox lays claim to the novel, indelibly marking Mary and reader alike.