Review by Booklist Review
The unnamed narrator in Bedford's debut is surrounded by the two elements of the title: her friends, with whom she shares a house, and the dark shapes that bring up both memories of her past and doubts about an uncertain future. The friends are experiencing life together in Sydney, Australia, with the verve that characterizes Gen Z and younger millennials, but our narrator is plagued by the grief she feels after her father's death. As a freelance journalist, she spends her days interviewing subjects for articles, and her grief is compounded by the many variations of sorrow she finds among the different populations in Sydney. In flashbacks, she examines her history with her father and explores the special bond they had. While light on plot, the story does have a chronological arc: it moves through an entire year of the narrator's life as she helps to build a community of her own and then watches it fall apart. Bedford weaves a blanket of words that fans of complex literary fiction will fall into and savor.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
A young journalist details her life in a rapidly gentrifying Sydney suburb of Redfern. The narrator in Bedford's debut novel is approaching 30, sharing a house with a group of friends who are, like her, second-generation Australians. (The narrator is "half-Indian, half-Anglo" and complains that she is mistaken for a Spanish tourist; her housemates' families hail from Cambodia and Palestine.) At the novel's beginning, the three are looking for a housemate, someone to join in their booze-fueled philosophical conversations or their late-night art gallery strolls, stealing free wine and cheese from wealthy gentrifiers. The fourth housemate, a musician the gang calls Bowerbird, moves in one spring, as the narrator reels in the aftermath of losing her father, something that sets her slightly apart from her friends, who have not yet experienced such losses. ("Grief oozes from the pores and radiates outward, so people catch the scent on you," the narrator opines.) The novel spans the period of a year, moving from spring to spring as the housemates wander the city and negotiate their relationships with each other, with their families, with partners, and, most of all, with the city that grows more and more beloved to them even as it transforms nearly beyond recognition. Bedford's own background is in both anthropology and journalism, and those are the genres that the book most resembles; the narrator can never stop stepping back and observing with a coolly ethnographic eye, whether she is visiting a local shoe repair shop and conversing with the Lebanese immigrants there or sweatily dancing in a converted church with strangers. As a slice of life from a young millennial in Australia's most multicultural city, the book is engaging; as a novel, it doesn't hang together. A captivating setting that stands in the way of a singular story. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review
Review by Kirkus Book Review