Green Dot
The hilarious, heart-breaking must-read debut novel of 2024
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- 10,99 €
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- 10,99 €
Descripción editorial
A BEST BOOK OF 2024 IN STYLIST, DAILY MAIL, THE I, IRISH TIMES, SUNDAY TIMES AND RED
'One of the best books you will read all year'
ELIZABETH DAY
'Incredibly funny. Every sentence sparkles'
CAITLIN MORAN
'Imagine the intensity of Annie Ernaux's Simple Passion written with the lightness of Bridget Jones's Diary and the irreverence of Fleabag'
THE SUNDAY TIMES
'One of the most entertaining reads we've had in a long time'
STYLIST
'This year's Sorrow and Bliss. Hilarious and heartbreaking'
DAILY MAIL
'So droll, bawdy, sexy, hilarious and good fun, everything you read thereafter seems dull in comparison'
THE I PAPER
'The debut of the year'
THE I PAPER
'A hilarious novel about falling in love with someone you really shouldn't ... I raced through it with increasing delight'
DAILY MAIL
'Witty as Fleabag, psychologically insightful as Sally Rooney'
LUCIE WHITEHOUSE
Hera is in her mid-twenties, which seems young to everyone except people in their mid-twenties.
Since leaving school, she has been trying to kick and scream into existence a life she cares about, but with little success so far.
Until she meets Arthur.
He works with her, he is older than her, he is also married. But in her soulless office - the large cold room she feels destined to spend her life in - he is a source of much-needed sustenance.
And though Hera has previously dated women, she soon falls headlong into a workplace romance that will quickly consume her life.
Laugh-out-loud funny, deeply moving and whip smart, Green Dot is a story about the terrible allure of wanting something that promises nothing and the winding, torturous, often hilarious journey we take in deciding who we are and who we want to be.
'If you liked Fleabag you will love Green Dot'
PANDORA SYKES
'It's positively indecent that a book this funny should also be so moving and wise and well-observed'
REBECCA WAIT
'Gutting, funny, smart, smart, smart. Madeleine Gray is a hilarious, humane, and highly perceptive writer'
CLAIRE LOMBARDO
'Sentence by sentence perfection. Razor sharp, hilarious, clever, and devastatingly honest'
LOUISE O'NEILL
'A novel everyone will be talking about'
GRAZIA
'Full of incredibly sharp sentences and darkly comic moments'
BBC CULTURE
'Wildly funny... Fans of Fleabag will adore Green Dot'
RED MAGAZINE
'Funny, whip-smart, and unbearably realistic, Gray nails the angst of being young. You'll tear through the pages. Genius'
HEAT MAGAZINE
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Australian writer Gray debuts with the canny story of a 24-year-old woman struggling to be an adult. Throughout her life, Hera never believed in getting a job. In high school, she was a good student but not well liked, and since college she has been living with her father in Sydney, biding her time until she is forced to support herself. Eventually, she's hired as a "community monitor" for a digital news outlet. During her first week, she's ignored by the office's journalists and counts down the hours as she moderates online comments. Hera's dull routine brightens after an encounter with a manager named Arthur in the elevator, where she decides to "cannonball into conversation." Hoping to make an impression, she asks him, "Who do you hate most in the office?" Arthur responds later via DM, their chatting leads to drinks, and they begin an affair. Hera falls for him and develops an obsession, which only grows stronger as Arthur refuses to leave his wife. Hera is vibrantly written, and Gray thankfully provides her narration with enough distance for self-clarity ("It is possible that my dedication to this relationship was in fact a dedication to my belief in myself"). Gray's unflinching bildungsroman is great fun.