Home
Study for Obedience: A novel
Loading Inventory...
Barnes and Noble
Study for Obedience: A novel
Current price: $22.95
Barnes and Noble
Study for Obedience: A novel
Current price: $22.95
Loading Inventory...
Size: Audiobook
*Product Information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, and additional information please contact Barnes and Noble
WINNER OF THE GILLER PRIZE • Shortlisted for the 2023 Booker Prize • Included in Granta's Best of Young British Novelists 2023 • For readers of Shirley Jackson, Iain Reid, and Claire-Louise Bennett, a haunting, compressed masterwork from an extraordinary new voice.
A young woman moves from the place of her birth to the remote northern country of her forebears to be housekeeper to her brother, whose wife has recently left him.
Soon after her arrival, a series of inexplicable events occurs - collective bovine hysteria; the demise of a ewe and her nearly born lamb; a local dog's phantom pregnancy; a potato blight. She notices that the local suspicion about incomers in general seems to be directed with some intensity at her and she senses a mounting threat that lies 'just beyond the garden gate.' And as she feels the hostility growing, pressing at the edges of her brother's property, she fears that, should the rumblings in the town gather themselves into a more defined shape, who knows what might happen, what one might be capable of doing.
With a sharp, lyrical voice, Sarah Bernstein powerfully explores questions of complicity and power, displacement and inheritance.
Study for Obedience
is a finely tuned, unsettling novel that confirms Bernstein as one of the most exciting voices of her generation.
A young woman moves from the place of her birth to the remote northern country of her forebears to be housekeeper to her brother, whose wife has recently left him.
Soon after her arrival, a series of inexplicable events occurs - collective bovine hysteria; the demise of a ewe and her nearly born lamb; a local dog's phantom pregnancy; a potato blight. She notices that the local suspicion about incomers in general seems to be directed with some intensity at her and she senses a mounting threat that lies 'just beyond the garden gate.' And as she feels the hostility growing, pressing at the edges of her brother's property, she fears that, should the rumblings in the town gather themselves into a more defined shape, who knows what might happen, what one might be capable of doing.
With a sharp, lyrical voice, Sarah Bernstein powerfully explores questions of complicity and power, displacement and inheritance.
Study for Obedience
is a finely tuned, unsettling novel that confirms Bernstein as one of the most exciting voices of her generation.