



Animals
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5.0 • 2 Ratings
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
A super-charged comedy that explores the eternal question: must you change your lifestyle in your thirties, or can you keep partying until the bitter end?
Laura and Tyler are two young women who have been tearing up the city streets for ten years, leaving a trail of angry drug dealers and spent men in their wake. Now Laura is engaged to be married and her teetotal classical pianist fiancé, Jim, is away overseas. Tyler wants to keep the party going, but Laura is torn between the constant temptations provided by her best friend and the promise of a calmer life with Jim on the horizon. As the wedding draws closer, the duo’s limits are tested, along with their friendship.
Animals is hilarious, honest, raw and thoroughly moving. It is about deciding when it's time to grow up and recognizing what must be left behind if you do.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A woman is torn between her best friend and her fianc in this delayed-coming-of-age novel filled with debauchery and friendship. Laura and Tyler live in squalor in Manchester. They're overeducated, underemployed, and devoted to excess even though their friends set aside the partying life years earlier. Now 32, Laura does the least amount of work she can get away with at her job and is similarly apathetic about writing Bacon, her novel about a priest who falls in love with a talking pig. She is engaged to Jim, a teetotaling classical pianist who is often on the road. If Jim acts as Laura's superego quietly condemning her over-indulgence Tyler is all id, sort of like a younger version of Patsy from Absolutely Fabulous, and not all that quietly trying to sabotage Laura's upcoming wedding. Unsworth's writing is vividly vulgar, outrageously physical, and darkly funny. Portrayals of women behaving badly are often meant to be funny, but Tyler's aggressive self-destructiveness worries, even shocks, creating a memorable, deceptively poignant novel.