The Town
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- $7.99
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- $7.99
Publisher Description
But there had been a war. Everyone was certain of it, though it had been a long time since.
This is Australia: an unnamed, dead-end town in the heart of the outback. A young writer arrives in New South Wales to research local settlements that are slowly vanishing into oblivion - but he didn't expect these ghost towns to literally disappear before his eyes. When an epidemic of mysterious holes threatens the town's existence, he is plunged into an abyss of weirdness from which he may never recover.
Dark, slippery and unsettling, Shaun Prescott's debut novel achieves many things. It excavates a nation's buried history of colonial genocide, and tells a love story that asks if outsiders can ever truly belong. Through a glass darkly, The Town examines the shadowy underbelly of Australian identity - and the result is a future classic.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Prescott debuts with a promising allegory of an Australia in cultural and economic flux. An unnamed narrator moves to the Central West of New South Wales, planning to work on a book about rural towns in the region that have "simply disappeared" from the landscape along with the people who lived in them. After renting a room and getting a job in a grocery store, where he plays back dictations of his work in progress, vaguely planned as a hybrid of journalism and horror, the narrator befriends his roommate Rob's girlfriend, Ciara, a DJ with a late-night slot at a community radio station. Her feedback on the narrator's book ("she couldn't tell whether the book was fiction or fact") echoes questions that are sure to emerge from the reader. As bottomless holes start appearing throughout the town, people and buildings begin to vanish, the cost of goods increases, and civic order unravels. Ciara, who's broken up with Rob, plans an escape with the narrator. While the ephemeral details wear thin ("As the town disappeared, so did my grip on any particular town truth"), Prescott brilliantly captures the disconcerting effect of a town's changing storefronts, people, and customs on the newcomer and Ciara, offering stark reflections on the young characters' search for a sense of definition and permanence. Prescott is off to a strong start.