The Degenerates
![The Degenerates](/cover/xwltIIWJqdyWvS8E/big/The%20Degenerates.jpg)
- Authors
- Richardson, Raeden
- Publisher
- Text Publishing
- Tags
- contemporary
- Date
- 2024-09-03T07:00:00+00:00
- Size
- 0.82 MB
- Lang
- en
Following the interwoven lives of four characters across India, Australia and the United States, the novel takes root in Melbourne and brings its streets, shopping centres and laneways to life with astounding originality—the city may never be the same again.
The Degenerates radiates with Titch’s fanaticism and Ginny’s obsessions. Somnath’s devastating history reflects every life divided around the globe. And Maha, the heart of the novel, is an extraordinary creation, an abiding figure of modern salvation. Brimming with vitality, humour, intelligence and brilliant writing, The Degenerates engages with the realities of modern loneliness and every form of departure—from our homes, from our families and even from life itself.
In propulsive prose, The Degenerates summons the power of storytelling, disrupts conventional narratives and pays tribute to those lives often lost in the margins.
Raeden Richardson grew up in Melbourne and graduated from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. His work has been supported by the Australia Council for the Arts, La Napoule Foundation and Yaddo. His writing has appeared in The Sydney Morning Herald , Griffith Review, Kill Your Darlings and New Australian Fiction.
‘ The Degenerates is vivid, wild and even prophetic. It left me in awe. Raeden Richardson is the real deal.’ Robbie Arnott, author of Limberlost
‘Richardson creates a world much like ours but filled with dark magic and coincidences of the wildest kinds… a brilliant and transporting debut.’ Margot Livesey, author of The Boy in the Field
‘A buoyant, macabre, subversive love song to the art of storytelling.’ Kate Christensen, author of Welcome Home, Stranger
‘Radiates with vitality…one feels as if its pages are somehow emitting the material of real life.’ Vauhini Vara, author of T he Immortal King Rao
‘Outstanding—an epic tale full of vivid characters and told in a unique voice. The Degenerates is sad and funny and beautiful and strange.’ Chris Womersley, author of Ordinary Gods and Monsters