Heatstroke
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Narrated by:
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By:
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Meredyth Cole
A devoted lover and wannabe screenwriter, January is unable to love or write after finding out her (now ex) girlfriend has cheated. Restless and questioning it all, January and her stoic bestie Laura travel to a menacing California in search of recreation and inspiration—anything to alleviate the grief.
There, January submerges herself into a life of indulgence—until she makes eye contact, poolside, with a telepathic bunny. Inhabited by the spirit of Caroline Lamb, the eclipsed muse of Lord Byron and a self-described footnote in the history of English literature, this magical, brassed doe coaches January through the messy past and the increasingly sinister present. And she may not be the only lost soul hell-bent on capturing January's attention.
A Faustian bargain for modern times, Heatstroke unwinds through a rippling tale of heartbreak, obsession and creativity. With it, Meredyth Cole signals her prodigious talent and offers us a spicy, boundless realm where "going insane is low-key sexy."
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Critic reviews
"Maniacally entertaining and darkly absurd, Meredyth Cole's debut is a wicked spiral into psychic pain, surreal coming-of-age and the decadent madness of female artistic genius. Heatstroke serves as both a horror comedy of a bad break-up and a sharp-eyed satire of the zillennial condition with its surprisingly tender moments of vulnerability juxtaposed with acerbic one-liners. Compulsively readable and unexpected, this novel will delight and provoke. Prepare to cackle loudly and worry for the young narrator. Cole is a thrilling writer to watch." —Lindsay Wong, author of Villain Hitting for Vicious Little Nobodies
"I adored this book. Surreal, addictive and hot, magic passes through these pages with the ease of a desert breeze. My time reading Heatstroke felt indulgent, imbuing me with the brilliant, unbothered viciousness of its characters. Deeply relatable for the heartbroken and insatiable." —Aurora Stewart de Peña, author of Julius Julius
"A rollicking, hilarious road trip. . . . For fans of Mona Awad, this is a sensual, absurd, laugh-out-loud tale of the lasting horror of romantic obsession. It asks the most terrifying existential question of all: How does a woman get over anyone?" —Arizona O’Neill, author of Opioids and Organs
"A compelling novel residing within the intersectional space—much larger than we may always wish to admit—between heartbreak and literary creation. Heatstroke’s Faustian bargain appears to make a deal with metaphor itself, and its irresistible prose moves us effortlessly between genres and consciousnesses." —Madhur Anand, author of To Place a Rabbit
"I adored this book. Surreal, addictive and hot, magic passes through these pages with the ease of a desert breeze. My time reading Heatstroke felt indulgent, imbuing me with the brilliant, unbothered viciousness of its characters. Deeply relatable for the heartbroken and insatiable." —Aurora Stewart de Peña, author of Julius Julius
"A rollicking, hilarious road trip. . . . For fans of Mona Awad, this is a sensual, absurd, laugh-out-loud tale of the lasting horror of romantic obsession. It asks the most terrifying existential question of all: How does a woman get over anyone?" —Arizona O’Neill, author of Opioids and Organs
"A compelling novel residing within the intersectional space—much larger than we may always wish to admit—between heartbreak and literary creation. Heatstroke’s Faustian bargain appears to make a deal with metaphor itself, and its irresistible prose moves us effortlessly between genres and consciousnesses." —Madhur Anand, author of To Place a Rabbit
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