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  • Published: 17 September 2024
  • ISBN: 9780241997949
  • Imprint: Penguin General UK
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 320
  • RRP: $26.00

The Memory of Animals

From the Costa Novel Award-winning author of Unsettled Ground




From the Costa Award-winning, Women's Prize-shortlisted author of Unsettled Ground: 'a stunning piece of speculative fiction' (The i)

Humans are useless at learning from their mistakes. We just have to keep making new plans.

When Neffy wakes up from an uneasy sleep in a hospital bed, nothing is as it should be. There is no food, and nobody to tend to her. The city streets outside her window have fallen silent. She doesn’t know it yet, but a debilitating new virus is sweeping the globe, and the world will never be the same again.

Feverish, confused, and wary of the strangers trapped inside with her, Neffy finds solace in her own memories of the past – even the memories of the mistakes that led her here.

But as the days turn into weeks, it is clear that Neffy will have to make a choice. How do you choose between a past that has already disappeared forever, and a future you can't begin to imagine?

  • Published: 17 September 2024
  • ISBN: 9780241997949
  • Imprint: Penguin General UK
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 320
  • RRP: $26.00

About the author

Claire Fuller

Claire Fuller was born in Oxfordshire, England, in 1967. She gained a degree in sculpture from Winchester School of Art, but went on to have a long career in marketing and didn't start writing until she was forty. She has an MA in Creative and Critical Writing from the University of Winchester and lives in Hampshire with her husband and two children. She is also an artist and sculptor and has had several short stories published. Our Endless Numbered Days is her first novel.

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Praise for The Memory of Animals

The way she writes (with empathy but never sentimentality) moves my heart

Elizabeth Day, author of Magpie

Claire Fuller strikes the perfect balance between beauty and melancholy

Clare Mackintosh, author of Hostage

Stunning ... A page-turning, topical, edge-of-your-seat story that resonates with the reader on an emotional level, and leaves them thinking about it for a long time afterwards

Louise Morrish, author of Operation Moonlight

Haunting and unsettling, moving and thoughtful, with horror lurking at the edges, this is a subtle, elegant novel. Claire Fuller is a huge talent

Lucy Atkins, author of Magpie Lane

Claire Fuller is such an interesting and original writer and she has produced another literary page-turner ... Compulsive and thoroughly convincing. Terrific!

Clare Chambers, author of Small Pleasures

Claire Fuller is a fascinating writer, and The Memory of Animals is further evidence of her powers. Her story is one of survival, but her subject is humanity itself. With immense skill, she shines a light on the dark heart of our existence - the beauty and brutality of human behaviour. This is an unforgettable novel

Kathleen MacMahon, author of Nothing But Blue Sky

Wonderful, sorrowful, haunting, tender, elegiac

Barney Norris, author of The Undercurrent

Claire Fuller is my favourite story-teller. I read The Memory of Animals in one sitting, swept up by the thriller-like pace and the sheer joy of reading a great story. Yet, in the book's aftermath, I was haunted by Neffy's fumbling humanity in the face of loss and fear, and how courage isn't always obvious - even to those who find it. Fuller's books come in at the eyes, but they settle right behind the heart.

Melanie Finn, author of The Hare

Full of jeopardy and strangeness but also laced with Fuller's trademark generosity and compassion. A startling and satisfying book

Julie Myerson, author of Nonfiction

Fuller excels in examining the everyday moments at the heart of a life ... A memorable meditation on how the human struggle to survive in captivity is not so different than that of our animal kin

Kirkus

A story you'll both recognize from our collective recent past, and a thrilling departure from our reality

Good Housekeeping USA, The Best Books of 2023 so far

A gripping page-turner, this apocalyptic tale is given warmth and depth by the portrayal of Neffy, a young woman with a complicated past to which she returns to escape the horrors of the present

Woman and Home

A woman once undone by empathy now finds that it could be her salvation in Claire Fuller's stunning postapocalyptic novel ... Sobering and evocative, The Memory of Animals is a novel about who we choose to be when the lights go out

Foreword

Following her award-winning novel Unsettled Ground, Fuller has returned with a piece of stunning speculative fiction

The i

A haunting novel of second chances set in a near-future pandemic ... Intricately structured ... The entwined pain and pleasure of memory is at the heart of Neffy's story, as is the hard work of establishing trust and finding forgiveness, particularly for oneself. This is a pandemic novel, yes, but one that radically transcends the label

Publishers Weekly, Starred Review

Fuller is an excellent writer and she neatly conveys boredom as well as dread (no mean feat)

Anthony Cummings, Daily Mail

A riveting exploration of agency, allegiance and choice

Marie Claire

A thought-provoking and utterly compelling novel from a writer we always look forward to reading

Glamour

Brave, unflinching and beautiful

Beth Underdown, author of The Witchfinder's Sister

A haunting novel about love, survival and everything in between ... one to get excited about

Stylist, Best Modern Dystopia

A creeping tale of isolation and the dangerous allure of memory

Liz Earle Wellbeing

Fuller's latest work is thought-provoking and unsettling, and somehow strikes a further warning note to a world already in crisis

Irish Independent

[A] post-Covid psychological thriller ... takes faintly distubing turns through grimly familiar territory to suggest that what makes us heroic, or not, hinges on unexpected things

Mail on Sunday

A taut and atmospheric read, an exploration of captivity, sacrifice and survival in a post-apocalyptic world ... Asks important, resonant questions of life in extremis ... Fuller writes brilliantly ... The superb ending ties everything together with a moving, tragic cohesiveness

Irish Times

Compelling ... A riveting, don't-miss account of what some may see as the reality to come; long-time Fuller readers will relish this completely engrossing story, which questions what we value most

Library Journal

Compelling ... A timely read ... Fuller is on strong form in evoking the terrors faced by those who are not just marginalised but entirely forgotten by society

Daily Express

There's a haunted elegance to Fuller's vision of a fallen world ... Sensuous

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