New Animal

(Author)
Available
4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
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Product Details
Price
$17.99  $16.73
Publisher
Two Dollar Radio
Publish Date
Pages
212
Dimensions
5.1 X 7.0 X 0.5 inches | 0.55 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781953387127

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About the Author
Ella Baxter is a writer and sculptor living in Melbourne, Australia. In her spare time she runs a small business making bespoke death shrouds. She is currently writing her second novel, Woo Woo.
Reviews

Excerpt:
GRIEF IS THE FAMILY BUSINESS
An excerpt of New Animal by Ella Baxter in Electric Literature, recommended by Courtney Maum, February 16, 2022

Additional Reading:
"Being a writer and writing are two separate things, and neither is easy"
An essay by Ella Baxter in The Sydney Morning Herald, January 28, 2022

Reviews

* 2022 Republic of Consciousness Prize, Longlist.
* ABA "Indie Next List" pick for March 2022.
* 2022 Best Young Australian Novelists awards,
Winner.
* Readings Prize for New Australian Fiction,
Shortlist.
* "A Best Book of 2022" --Glamour, NYLON, Refinery29 UK, Harpers BAZAAR UK
* "A Most Anticipated Book"
--Lit Hub, The Millions

The longlist for the inaugural (2022) Republic of Consciousness Prize, United States and Canada, given annually to a work of literary fiction published by a small press, includes Ella Baxter's New Animal! "The aim of the prize is to support small presses for their on-going commitment to work of high literary merit. Most often it is the small publishers who take the largest creative and financial risks and yet, in a purely financial sense, they are least able to do so."
EVENT: a Longlist Zoom party for the public on March 1, starting at 6:00 pm CST.
(Read more: Michael Schaub, Kirkus, "Longlist Revealed for Small Press Book Prize" Jan 24, 2023)

New Animal by Ella Baxter is one of Glamour's "40 Best Books of 2022"!

"Ella Baxter's slim and beautiful debut novel looks at death with a rare attention to its physicality. Amelia, the protagonist of New Animal, is left reeling when her mother dies. She heads to Tasmania to seek solace in her birth-father and ends up getting involved in the local BDSM community. It's funny, thought-provoking, and very heartfelt."
--Bekah Waalkes, Electric Literature
"17 Small Press Books From 2022 That You Might Have Missed"

"The protagonist in Baxter's New Animal is in a holding pattern as a relatively isolated cosmetic mortician in the family business. She ends up in Tasmania with her birth father and also, separately, exploring a BDSM club there. The precipitating event is her loving mother's sudden death that leaves the twenty-something unmoored with only a stepfather and older brother as her community."
--Hannah Matthews, author of You or Someone You Love, in Lit Hub
"The Annotated Nightstand: What Hannah Matthews is Reading Now and Next"

"If you enjoy the weirder and more tender sides of life, this is for you. A cosmetic mortician who experiences a loss that leads to unusual coping mechanisms. A new, refreshing take on death, grief, parental love, pain and the ways we all tend to numb ourselves from reality."
--Olivia Veveiros, Green Apple Books staff favorite releases of 2022

New Animal by Ella Baxter is included in BOMB's "2022 Small Press Gift Guide"!

"More photorealism and more pink are featured in these two colors, and the pink wins out for this book about a woman who, after a loss, skips out on her job painting the faces of the dead for their funerals, and explores her body's grief through BDSM. Though by a very slim margin, our voters appeared to prefer the colorful U.S. cover that contrasts with the black-and-white woman swimming to the U.K.'s."
--Katie Robinson, Electric Literature
"The Battle of the Book Cover: British versus American Edition"

"You can't produce the correct emotional response on demand, and other people's interpretations of grief can sometimes be oppressive. New Animal is such a great novel about wanting to mourn in a totally unorthodox way, free from judgment, surveillance, and pressure."
--Sally Oliver, Lit Hub
"The Act of Mourning Itself is a Final, Destitute Version of Love." A Reading List For the Grieving

"This story is unique and compelling. New Animal is funny, sad, and illuminating about the nature of mourning. Turns out, there's a lot to be learned about grief from the kink community. Who knew?"
--David Vogel, Buzzfeed
"16 Books To Fill The Sally Rooney-Sized Hole In Your Heart Once You've Binged Hulu's Conversations With Friends"

"By New Animal's second page, when its protagonist, funeral embalmer Amelia Aurelia, is imagining how she'd do the death make-up of the man she just slept with, you're certain that Bellingen-raised, Melbourne-based author Ella Baxter is one of our most original new literary voices."
--Robert Moran, Sydney Morning Herald, April 29, 2022
New Animal author Ella Baxter is one of three winners of the 2022 Sydney Morning Herald Best Young Australian Novelists awards.

"Amelia is in her late 20s and working at her stepfather's mortuary. But when her mother suddenly dies, rupturing her fragile family, Amelia flees to Tasmania, joins a BDSM community and embarks on a journey toward self-acceptance."
--The New York Times
"Newly Published March 3, 2022"

"Just when you think you've got the story, Ella Baxter dives deeper. New Animal is a dark, humorous take on grief and connection, centered on a cosmetic mortician and her eccentric family. A 'grab more wine and keep reading' kind of book."
--Kathy Baum, Tattered Cover Book Store, Denver, CO
New Animal is an ABA Indie Next List pick for March 2022

"Sex, BDSM, death, grief--New Animal is an intense read... when a sudden loss severs her ties with someone she loves, Amelia sets off on a mission to outrun her grief."
--Alice Snape and Kiera Egan, Cosmopolitan UK
"The best book recommendations for a sad girl summer"

"Ella's prose will grip you and not let go. This debut novel is vivid, raw, smart, darkly comic and genuinely unforgettable. Tightly wrought images will haunt you long after you close the book."
--Kay Wosewick (Boswell Book Company), Lit Hub
"Indie Booksellers Recommend the best of Independent Presses This February and March"

"This confident and gritty debut about a young make-up artist working in a mortuary takes the reader places they will never expect. Witty, emotional and raw, Amelia's story is also laugh-out-loud funny, somewhat bizarre (in a good way), and unlike anything else you have ever read."
--Readings Prize for New Australian Fiction, Shortlist
From the Readings announcement, on New Animal by Ella Baxter

"[New Animal] interrogates death through the lens of physicality: the narrator, Amelia Aurelia, is a flailing almost-thirty-year-old working as a cosmetic mortician at her family's mortuary business. The death of Amelia's beloved mother triggers her fight or flight response--she chooses the latter, seeking solace in Tasmania's BDSM scene. Watching Amelia interrogate her grief through the vehicle of sexual release and experimentation made a lot of sense to me. After all, aside from birth, death and sex are some of the most profound physical experiences available to humans... celebration of the human will to not just live, but feel alive."
--Courtney Maum, Electric Literature
Read an excerpt of the novel New Animal, recommended by author Courtney Maum

"A raw and irreverent portrait of one young woman's experience of the ways in which sexuality and sorrow overlap. Baxter's crisp, clean prose offers a surprisingly tender look at mourning from an unusual angle. A startling and intense meditation on sex, death and the uncontrollable responses a body has to both, New Animal is an arresting literary debut."
--Alice Martin, Shelf Awareness, starred review
(Read the full review of New Animal)

"Though the plot moves at a swift pace, and the BDSM arc is thoroughly entertaining, its Amelia's meditations on grief and loss--and the anxiety that surrounds them--that make this novel sing. And it's fascinating to watch Amelia go through the motions while attempting to reconcile what it means to be alive when everyone around you is dead.... For fans of Sally Rooney's brand of millennial malaise and Six Feet Under's tragicomic take on the mortuary business, New Animal is at turns graphic, raw and tender--a wholly human exploration of the Venn diagram of emotion."
--Sarah Stiefvater, PureWow
(Read the full review of New Animal)

"Baxter's crackling prose keeps the ship afloat. The novel is a pacey read, a soulful comedy, and an intimate case study of a young person trying to put her life together. New Animal packs a compelling tale in a narrative style that is equal parts caustic, wry, and nervy, and reflects the ways in which millennials continue to be stymied by the world around them. New Animal signals the entry of a new voice in fiction that is proliferated by disconnect and dissuasion."
--Anandi Mishra, Ploughshares
"Disconnect and Dissuasian in Ella Baxter's New Animal"

"New Animal examines the nature of death and sex through hilarious circumstances that illuminate the grotesque human condition of being confined to a body. Baxter's writing feels utterly original, and she has a gift for juxtaposing dark emotional interiors with unexpected situations that are laugh-out-loud funny."
--Shelby Hinte, BOMB
"Suburban Kink Parties and Scorched-Earth Novels: Ella Baxter Interviewed by Shelby Hinte"

"A cosmetic mortician struggles with the abrupt loss of her mother while also becoming involved in the Tasmanian BDSM community. Suffice to say, this darkly humorous novel is one of the most interesting takes on grief I've ever read."
--Jen Minor, Flyleaf Books (Chapel Hill, North Carolina)

"Baxter takes on a refreshingly real and acerbic tone in her portrayal of Amelia, exploring the inner psyche of a young woman attempting to piece together her existence in the modern world... New Animal offers a new take on the aging millennial novel."
--Christina Obolenskaya, Cleveland Review of Books
(Read the full review of New Animal)

"Baxter's character eloquently pulls the mask from not only the face of the death industry, but grief's face as well. A wonderful novel, New Animal, is a groundbreaking, holistic call for reform, mostly of the self."
--Nicole Yurcaba, Southern Review of Books
(Read the full review of New Animal)

"While this novel is peppered with scenes in kink clubs and the macabre of Amelia's profession -- and is also, in places obscenely funny -- this is a story of a young woman who has to figure out how to live without her mother and has to also understand how her two dads will put aside their differences to hold her through the loss of the woman they both loved. There is fiction about grief and then there is Ella Baxter's New Animal. Truly stunning."
--Wendy J. Fox, Buzzfeed
"16 Upcoming Books From Indie Presses You'll Love"

"This strange, sexy, wonderful novel by Australian author Baxter follows a woman who works in her family's mortuary and processes the grief of a loved one's passing by an exploration of local kink clubs."
--Lydia Kiesling, The Millions
"Most Anticipated: The Great First-Half 2022 Book Preview"

"In this raw, arresting novel, Amelia Aurelia--a cosmetic mortician--goes into a tailspin after the death of her mother. Included in the tailspin are: a trip to Tasmania, an uncertain communion with her birth father, dating apps, a BDSM club, kink-related paperwork, a horse head, painting a man's face with menstrual blood, mean texts. Ultimately, [New Animal] is a book about something that seems obvious, but so often isn't: the inextricability of mind and body, and the importance of our connections with other people."
--Emily Temple, Lit Hub
"Most Anticipated Books of 2022"

"There's not one expected detail here... Excellent."
--Jenny Singer, Glamour
"The Best Books of 2022 to Add to Your Reading List"

"The book is a well-crafted one, relying on humor and authenticity, that narrative voice and those scenic skills, to render Amelia and her story in an engaging, authentic manner."
--D.W. White, The Rupture
(Read the full review of New Animal on The Rupture)

"There's a compelling quality to [Amelia's] honesty that recalls Raven Leilani's Luster or the sex-addicted eponymous narrator of Leila Slimani's Adèle. As with these books, Baxter focuses on the ways in which pain works its way through the body."
--Sarah Gilmartin, The Irish Times
(Read the full review of New Animal)

"The novel follows a mortuary makeup artist into the Tasmanian BDSM scene as she tries to make sense of a sudden loss."
--Natalie Wall, Refinery29
"Filth & Loathing: Why 'Gross' Women Are Taking Over Literature"

"Baxter's prose is a living thing, wild and snarling, its jagged claws and honed teeth unforgiving and relentless. Amelia stokes empathy as a woman seeking absolution down dead ends. Her codependency and repression are addressed in frank terms--'Other people have always been the canary in the mine for me'--and every beat of dark comedy is paired with an empathetic wince as Amelia forces herself past her limits. New Animal is at turns graphic, disturbing, and tender--in other words: human."
--Danielle Ballantyne, Foreword
(Read the full review of New Animal on Foreword)

"In her incredible debut, Baxter combines dark humor with a complex protagonist and bold narration to both astound and devastate her readers. Amelia is a memorable heroine who is raw with grief as she struggles with and explores the paradox of finding harmony in the dichotomy of life and death."
--Emily Park, Booklist

"At turns a rollicking sexual romp almost slapstick in its intensity and an existential meditation filled with the languid profundity of bodies at their final rest, this unusual novel navigates the most treacherous of emotional territories--the fault lines between love and grief, sex and death--with a deliberate lack of grace and real charm. A tragicomic debut by an impressive new voice."
--Kirkus
(Read the full review of New Animal on Kirkus)

"Australian writer Baxter debuts with a raw and mordant story of a woman processing her grief, sexuality, and family relationships... Baxter delicately balances the emotional heft of the situation with dark humor (Amelia, asked how she identifies while on the way to a kink club, responds, 'Human woman, tired, sad, on a date with you, not wholly sure what a sadist is') and finds clever ways to push Amelia toward coming to terms with her limits. It adds up to a convincing look at a young woman's path toward self-acceptance."
--Publishers Weekly
(Read the full review of New Animal on Publishers Weekly)

"Trying to escape trauma by running away is hardly a new narrative concept but Baxter's writing is so forthright, her protagonist so raw and unmediated in her feelings, thoughts and flailing at the 'arrowhead of sorrow' that New Animal makes for compelling reading."
--Thuy On, The Sydney Morning Herald
(Read the full review of New Animal on The Sydney Morning Herald)

"At turns sad and funny, this story follows a young woman who works in the mortuary industry who is thrown by the death of her mother and struggling (in surprising ways) with how she works through the grief."
--Alana Haley, Schuler Books (Grand Rapids, Michigan)

"Baxter is fascinated with the female body, which 'trots everywhere with you like an indebted lover', and how it assimilates extreme emotions... Self-destructive anti-heroines are in vogue, but what Amelia's story makes clear is how under-represented female sexuality still is."
--Alasdair Lees, The Telegraph
"The four best debut novels to read in 2022"

"[Main character Amelia] has outrageous sex to swallow her ineffable sadness, and though she's from Australia rather than Ireland, she could have stepped from the pages of a Sally Rooney novel... Baxter is a sharp observer, and seems to have the Didion knack of getting close to a subject without surrendering her scepticism."
--Sarah Ditum, The Guardian
(Read the full review of New Animal on The Guardian)

"There's an interesting dynamic to Amelia, the main character of Ella Baxter's novel New Animal: she's disembodied--her mind is quite detached from her body, yet her life is spent engaging with the messier facts of other people's bodies... The story reaches a final scene of catharsis that is unexpectedly beautiful and transcendent, but it is as unforeseen and incomplete and fractured as emotional life itself."
--Rufus Hickok, Ordinary Times
(Read the full review of New Animal on Ordinary Times)

"This is writing that is sharp and fearlessly chaotic, grappling with the depths humans go to for mere illusion of control. Luridly funny and always surprising, New Animal takes on the promise of catharsis--and upends it entirely."
--Anahit Behrooz, The Skinny (UK)
(Read the full review of New Animal)

"New Animal is a wonderfully tender book. Ella Baxter doesn't shy away from any of the messiness of humanity, choosing instead to lean in, hard, and unpack all the ways that grief breaks us down and ultimately reshapes us. It's feral and raw, laugh out loud funny in parts, and absolutely the kind of family mess I love best. Baxter is a delightful writer and New Animal is a hell of a read."
--Kristen Arnett, New York Times-bestselling author of With Teeth and Mostly Dead Things

"New Animal is filled with death and darkness, yet Baxter's prose feels so very alive. A novel that's core is ultimately one of hope, a complex, heartfelt ballad to the strange, sloppy ways we find ourselves growing into the people we were meant to become."
--Jean Kyoung Frazier, author of Pizza Girl

"I inhaled Ella Baxter's New Animal, which is the sort of animal that is all spine, all teeth. The deftness of her prose, which is so damn funny, along with such a poignant and true and entertaining story, make this a book that positively glitters. Ella Baxter's New Animal is an animal that is so animal it's human."
--Lindsay Hunter, author of Eat Only When You're Hungry

"I loved this macabre, mordant, and very moving book. New Animal surprised and comforted me with its deft investigations of grief, power, and self, and with its beautiful prose. This is an economical novel that packs a major emotional punch."
--Lydia Kiesling, author of The Golden State

"New Animal is morbidly life-affirming, hilariously grief-stricken, sexy and lonely and lovely. Like a first date that goes way deep, like a coffin buried not quite deep enough. Ella Baxter's prose is an exciting new animal I won̵