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  • Published: 3 March 2020
  • ISBN: 9781784164805
  • Imprint: Black Swan
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 288
  • RRP: $22.99

Shelf Life




A refreshing, heart-wrenching, innovative debut about a young woman rebuilding herself after her partner abandons her, leaving behind only their shared shopping list for the upcoming week.

'Shelf Life is whip-smart, slyly heartbreaking, and I felt the truth of it in my bones.’ Sophie Mackintosh, author of The Water Cure
Ruth is thirty years old. She works as a nurse in a care home and her fiancé has just broken up with her. The only thing she has left of him is their shopping list for the upcoming week.

Starting with six eggs, and working through spaghetti and strawberries, apples and tea bags, this inventive novel builds a picture of a woman defined by the people she serves; her patients, her friends, and, most of all, her partner of ten years. Without him, Ruth needs to find out – with conditioner and single cream and a lot of sugar – who she is when she stands alone.

With her fresh unpredictable style, Franchini skewers modern relationships and toxic masculinity, moving effortlessly between humour and heartbreak to tell the story of a woman rebuilding herself on her own terms.

  • Published: 3 March 2020
  • ISBN: 9781784164805
  • Imprint: Black Swan
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 288
  • RRP: $22.99

About the author

Livia Franchini

Livia Franchini is a writer and translator from Tuscany, Italy, whose short stories have been published in numerous anthologies. Livia is also an inaugural writer-in-residence for the Connecting Emerging Literary Artist project. She lives in London and is completing a PhD in experimental women’s writing at Goldsmiths University.

Praise for Shelf Life

Shelf Life is whip-smart, slyly heartbreaking, and I felt the truth of it in my bones. Franchini dissects ideas of love, dating and identity in a way that feels both ruthless and humane. I loved it.

Sophie Mackintosh, author of 'The Water Cure'

This is a beautiful novel. The scene with the mother and the chicken is one of the most rigorous, affecting, strange scenes I have read in a while and it's still haunting me. It was funny, and sad, and I devoured it. It reminded me of Convenience Store Woman. I absolutely loved it.

Susannah Dickey, author of 'Tennis Lessons'

Shelf Life is so intimate. It's like riding the bus home with a friend as she confides her secret hopes and fears. Each raw emotion is carefully delivered. Franchini has created a protagonist who feels achingly real. I wanted to cancel all my plans and just read this book.

Rowan Hisayo Buchanan, author of 'Harmless Like You'

Shelf Life feels like a Bridget Jones for cynical souls. Franchini captures perfectly the mundane devastation of heartbreak and the utter impossibility of knowing and being known. Sweet, funny, odd and achingly perceptive, this seemingly small tale asks some terrifyingly big questions about love, loss, identity and existence. I couldn’t put it down.

Natasha Bell, author of 'His Perfect Wife'

A novel that explores the precarities, fragilities and tendernesses of modern life — it scintillates.

Eley Williams, author of 'Attrib: and other stories'

Shelf Life is dark and disarming. It wryly explores hunger and denial and the play between pleasure and power in an honest portrayal of the complexities of desire. Franchini's voice is sharp and clever and her debut novel tells us truths about how and why we love.

Jessica Andrews, author of 'Saltwater'

Shelf Life is a truly unique read; a book so thoughtfully and articulately written it draws the reader deep into the painful heart of a fracturing relationship. Ruth, the novel's central character is crafted in such a believable way, I felt every one of her disappointments keenly. I was rooting for her throughout. By the final page I felt like we'd been through something monumental together.

Jan Carson, author of 'The Fire Starters'

I absolutely loved this - really moving and powerful

Rebecca Reid, author of 'Perfect Liars'

Livia Franchini has delivered an impressive, Sally Rooney-esque debut novel.

New Statesman

Structured around a shopping list, the non-linear narrative is as droll as it is disarming. The playful form gives a new, distinctly millennial shape to perennial struggles of love and dating.

Culture Whisperer

Quirky, awkward and fresh . . . Slyly moving [and] vividly written . . . There’s a confidence to the wilful eccentricities of her writing that reminded me of Miranda July, as well as a fresh voice that’s highly readable.

The Observer

‘This intriguing debut ends up weirder and more structurally adventurous than its chattily plain-spoken opening leads us to expect . . . [with] a provocative climax to an unpredictable exploration of 21st-century sexual mores’

Daily Mail

A modern story told in a modern way

Press Association

An eccentric and lingering snapshot of millennial womanhood . . . Though unsettling at times, the unrelenting rawness of Shelf Life forms its brilliance. The novel is a bold and uncompromising addition to experimental women’s writing, exposing truths at every turn.

The F Word

A picture of a woman defined by those she serves [that] weaves in challenging questions about womanhood

Big Issue North

The real heart of the novel [is] how people must learn to stand alone - and how the apparently meek are often most resilient.

Monocle

This is a book that should not be missed: a beautifully executed contribution to the discussion of toxic masculine behaviour and the patterns of socialisation that enable it.

Sara Taylor, The Guardian