Decline and Fall on Savage Street
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Decline and Fall on Savage Street
Decline and Fall on Savage Street
Decline and Fall on Savage Street is a fictional companion to The Villa at the Edge of the Empire and the winner of the 2017 NZ Heritage Novel Award.
This fascinating prize-winning novel revolves around a house with a fanciful little turret, built by a river. Unfolding within its rooms are lives filled with event and emotional upheaval. A lot happens. The tumultuous events of the twentieth century also leave their mark, from war to economic collapse, the deaths of presidents and princesses to new waves of music, art, architecture, and political ideas.
Meanwhile, a few metres away in the river, another creature follows a different, slower rhythm. Beneath them all, the planet moves to its own immense geological time.
With insight, wide-ranging knowledge, and humour, this novel explores the same territory as its non-fiction twin, The Villa at the Edge of the Empire. Writing in a city devastated by major earthquakes, Fiona Farrell rebuilds a brilliant, compelling, and imaginative structure from bits and pieces salvaged from one hundred years of history. A lot has happened. This is how it might have felt.
Review Highlights:
"It's a work of incredible research and incredible scope and incredible feeling . . . it's really wonderful. I think we will look back at these two books Decline and Fall on Savage Street and The Villa at the Edge of Empire and think of them as being very important in our local literary history as marking time and place and moment and feeling; it's a wonderful piece of art." - Louise O'Brien, Radio NZ
"It's so vast, it shouldn't work; but it does. Primarily this is because, rather than anchoring her text to dry, historical minutiae, Farrell chooses to ground it to people, particularly family. So, as well as the impressive detail made especially graceful thanks to the author's poetic skill, the narrative follows one house settled upon the titular street and its inhabitants, particularly one family, extended and diverse. As such, chapter by chapter are, like a relay team, an exercise in passing the chronological story along. . . . Wide-ranging yet intimate, poetic yet simple, of the singular home yet speaking to the complexities of city and nation, Decline and Fall on Savage Street is a remarkable read." - Siobhan Harvey, Waikato Times
Book Details
INFORMATION
ISBN: 9780143770626
Publisher: Random House New Zealand Ltd
Format: Paperback / softback
Date Published: 31 July 2017
Country: New Zealand
Imprint: Vintage New Zealand
Audience: General / adult
DIMENSIONS
Spine width: 30.0mm
Width: 155.0mm
Height: 233.0mm
Weight: 487g
Pages: 368
About the Author
Fiona Farrell is one of New Zealand's leading writers. Born in Oamaru and educated at the universities of Otago and Toronto, she has published volumes of poetry, collections of short stories, non-fiction works, and many novels. Her first novel, The Skinny Louie Book, won the 1993 New Zealand Book Award for fiction. Other novels, poetry and non-fiction books have been shortlisted for the Montana and New Zealand Post Book Awards with four novels also nominated for the International Dublin IMPAC Award. In 2007 she received the Prime Minister's Award for Fiction, and in 2012 was appointed an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to literature. The Broken Book, a book of essays relating to the Christchurch earthquakes, was shortlisted for the non-fiction award in the 2012 Book Awards and critically greeted as the 'first major artwork' to emerge from the event. The Villa at the Edge of the Empire was also shortlisted for this award in 2016. Her work, which The New Zealand Herald has praised for its 'richness - of both theme and language', has been published around the world, including in the US, France and the UK. Beryl Fletcher praised Farrell for having '. . . the rare ability of turning the mundane events of domestic life into profound human experiences. Her writing is poetic, moving and literary.'
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