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English
Text Publishing Company
07 May 2019
A haunting and powerful novel from one of France's most exciting and talented young writers.

Animalia tells the confronting and compelling story of a peasant family in south-west France as they develop their plot of land into an intensive pig farm. In an environment dominated by animals, five generations endure the cataclysm of two world wars, economic disasters, and the emergence of a brutal industrialism. Only the enchanted realm of childhood-that of leonore, the matriarch, and Jerome, her grandson-and the innate freedom of the animals offer any respite from the barbarity of humanity. Animalia is a powerful novel about man's desire to conquer nature and the transmission of violence from one generation to the next.

By:  
Imprint:   Text Publishing Company
Country of Publication:   Australia
Dimensions:   Height: 233mm,  Width: 153mm,  Spine: 28mm
Weight:   496g
ISBN:   9781925773767
ISBN 10:   1925773760
Pages:   424
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Jean-Baptiste del Amo, born in 1981, is one of France?s most exciting and talented young writers. Animalia, his fourth novel, is his first to appear in English.Translator Frank Wynne?s translations include works by Michel Houellebecq, Frederic Beigbeder and Virginie Despentes.

Reviews for Animalia

'A lyrical powerhouse, a sophisticated portrait of a fucked-up feedback loop of familial cruelty and disappointment, and a story that, for all its brutality, also reveals something more...there is wickedness enough for this book to stand alongside Cormac McCarthy's meanest, but the brief moments when these beleaguered characters show their humanity and kindness-delivering a calf, bathing a mother-left me breathless.' * Paris Review * 'Del Amo's Puy-Larroque oppresses and destroys the family who inherited it, but it's a thrilling jolt of life to a reader who encounters it from afar. The writing appears effortless yet impossible to emulate, as if Del Amo were tuned in to a secret channel connecting him to words straight from the earth.' * Orion * 'Tackling a complex, fraught topic - the very essence of what it is to be a New Zealander - with courage, style and insight.' * Stuff.co.nz * '[An] extraordinary work' * Australian * 'Animalia is a disturbing and profound book. Del Amo builds such a realistic, richly textured world that by the novel's close, despite its horrors, it feels a real wrench to leave the landscape.' * Literary Review * 'There is hypnotic and disturbing writing and a profound materiality in this novel about the exploitation of animals.' * L'espresso (Italy) * 'Anyone who misses the good old days of peasant life should read Animalia, a runaway success in France.' * Il Giornale (Italy) * 'Del Amo's artistry lies in his depiction of people, their faces, their want, their silent desperation...Haunting...In his use of images, Jean-Baptiste is a master.' * Neue Zurcher Zeitung (Switzerland) * 'An epic book about family and human barbarity. An astonishing novel. Beyond its thematic richness, the pictorial power of the scenes and the savage sensitivity of the words in Animalia are worthy at moments of the best of Cormac McCarthy. A dark splendour.' -- L'Express 'Mixes the tragic energy of a family novel with the brutal evolution of the relationship between man and beast...Del Amo shows an apocalyptic vision of how humanity has been led to madness, all in the name of economic rationality...A richness of style both sweeping and powerful.' * Le Monde * 'Reminiscent of Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury.' * Le Figaro * 'Stunning...Shades of Antonin Artaud's machete let loose on Georges de La Tour's paintings...A book people will talk about.' * Le Point * 'A splendid novel...While tackling the issue of animal rights, Jean-Baptiste Del Amo constructs an intelligent, elliptical story, a meditation on human barbarity, family tensions and history that repeats itself. But Animalia is above all a virtuoso piece of writing that makes us experience colours and smells in a way so few works of recent fiction do-and which, incidentally, may inspire you to reduce the amount of pork you eat.' * Lire * 'Radical, violent and disturbing.' -- Telerama 'Jean-Baptiste Del Amo's talent is impressive. His writing is both rich and explicit, sinuous and et razor-sharp, sensuous and surgical...A great book.' -- Le Journal du Dimanche 'Evocative and insightful...Deeply perceptive and sharp as a razor, this novel will get under your skin.' * NB Magazine * 'Powerful...One of the most fascinating aspects of this novel is the way in which a sense of inevitability can loosen to allow for other possibilities and our perspective can be altered in unanticipated ways...Remarkable writing which is attentive to every moment, every sound and every silence-in a beautifully detailed translation by Frank Wynne.' * Irish Times * '[A]s magnificent as it is bleak: a sickening and strident alert.' * Australian Book Review * 'If novels came with matching scratch-and-sniff stickers, this one would clear a bookshop within seconds. Dung, urine, mucus, blood, bile and every other bodily fluid spread noxiously across the pages of Animalia...Yes, this fourth novel by a rising star of French fiction stinks to high heaven. It is also compassionate, lyrical, angry, audacious, composed with a supercharged eloquence, and translated-by Frank Wynne-with dazzling virtuosity...Both halves of Animalia play whiffily brilliant variations on the time-worn motifs of the French rural novel, with its warring kindred rooted in a land that nurtures but curses them...Del Amo's prose throws a bucket of slurry from some 'unspeakable mire' over the conventions of pastoral fiction. Yet he has plentiful passages of heart-lifting loveliness, as when an August harvest prompts Marcel to feel nature as 'an indissoluble great whole.' From first to last, 'the cruelty of men' emits its rancid stench. Thankfully, Del Amo lets us sniff the sweeter scents of tenderness and beauty too.' -- Boyd Tonkin * Financial Times * '[Del Amo] uses language like an Old Testament seer - grandiloquent, exquisitely tuned to the violence and anguish of his biblical rage. But at his centre there is no God, just the random eternality of the earth.' * Monthly * '[L]ikely to be hailed as a modern classic...Animalia in English has a truly savage quality, all blood and stench and despair...Animalia is an important reminder that literature's task is not necessarily to uplift, but to help us to attain a true understanding of our predicament.' * Guardian * 'This is an extraordinary book. A dark saga related in sprawling sentences, made denser still by obscure and difficult vocabulary...I was spellbound...The strangeness of the words, used with precision and scientific exactitude, slows your reading down, immersing you more in the scene on the page, and those scenes are so vividly imagined and conveyed...A kind of savage reimagining of Thomas Hardy and D.H. Lawrence.' -- David Mills * The Times * 'Animalia is a book about sex and violence, but it has unusual sobriety, and a story with a deep pull. The way it senses the natural world, in seed, vein, hair, grain, pore, bud, fluid is like nothing I've read.' * Daisy Hildyard, author of The Second Body * 'Animalia is stupendously good. This is a novel of epic scope and equally epic ambition, and it is exhilarating and frightening to read. Every page blazes with incandescent prose. After reading Animalia it might be a while before I can return to reading a contemporary novel, I suspect everything will seem tepid and timid in comparison. Del Amo has thrown us down a gauntlet: be bold, be daring, be rigorous, be a poet. A stunning book.' * Christos Tsiolkas *


  • Long-listed for The Republic of Consciousness Prize for Small Presses 2020 (UK)
  • Short-listed for German Book Prize, Translation 2019 (Germany)
  • Short-listed for The Republic of Consciousness Prize for Small Presses 2020 (UK)
  • Winner of Finalist, Gay Fiction, Lambda Literary Awards 2020 (United States)
  • Winner of Finalist, Translation, German Book Prize 2019 (Germany)
  • Winner of Prix du Livre Inter 2017 (France)
  • Winner of Prix Valery-Larbaud.

See Also