Oddbody
Stories
-
-
5.0 • 1 Rating
-
-
- $13.99
Publisher Description
“Full of heart and blood, this impressive, wildly imaginative collection heralds the arrival of a compelling new voice in speculative fiction.” —Gabino Iglesias, The New York Times
“This is weird girl fiction at its finest.” —Lucy Rose
“Compassionate, gross, deeply compelling. A must-read.” —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
Striking, visceral, and brutally honest, Rose Keating’s Oddbody is a captivating short story collection that delves into the weirdness of bodies and of existence itself through the voices of social outsiders and outcasts.
In her debut collection, Rose Keating takes you on a bold journey through the intricacies of sex, shame, and womanhood. With ten enchanting short stories, she crafts an emotional masterpiece that challenges us to reflect on the movement and needs of our bodies. Strange yet utterly mesmerizing, Oddbody is a provocative exploration that feels both surprising and sincerely authentic.
In “Oddbody,” a woman finds herself navigating a codependent relationship with a ghost, while “Squirm” portrays a daughter tending to her father as he devours himself from the inside out. “Pineapple” introduces us to a woman who opts to have feather wings surgically attached to her back. In “Eggshells,” a waitress gives birth to an egg during her breakfast shift. Each narrative in this collection is immersive, bizarre, and deeply empathetic, shining a light on women who dare to defy societal norms and invite you to question the conventions and milestones that determine success.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The search for love and fulfillment takes bizarre turns in Irish writer Keating's fearless debut collection. "Pineapple" centers on Jen and her swan wings, surgically attached by controversial artist Mary O'Mahony. Their implanting strains Jen's relationship with her partner Oisín—whose OCD and fear of Jen's body already complicate their bond—and draws her closer to Mary. Several stories explore body horror through loss of agency. In the amusing and eerie "Next to Cleanliness," office worker Catherine submits to her patronizing yet alluring doctor's extreme detox regimens, from raw meat diets to orgasm restrictions. While some stories feel thematically repetitive, Keating's assured voice and vivid imagery carry the day. The collection especially shines when it's grounded in the characters' desperate bids for connection, even at their own expense. Fourteen-year-old Saoirse befriends the vampire from the 1931 film Dracula in "Bela Lugosi Isn't Dead," while the title story finds call center agent Doireann forming a tender bond with a ghost who persistently urges her to end her life. Not only are these stories delightfully weird, but they offer a deeply empathetic exploration of shame, desire, and loneliness.