Too Close To Home
- Published: 2 May 2011
- ISBN: 9781864711783
- Imprint: Random House Australia
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 304
Too Close to Home, like its inner suburban setting, appears at first to be relaxed and unassuming, but what begins as a gentle undertow increases to unrelenting pressure. Blain is as comfortable with the domestic as she is with the political: whether writing intimacy or broad social tableaux, she is spot on. The atmosphere of Sydney's inner suburbs is beautifully evoked: you can smell the cut grass, hear the dogs barking. In spare effortless prose, Blain weaves a tightening noose of trouble and uncertainty, leaving you haunted long after the final page.
Fiona McGregor
Georgia Blain has the gift of clarity: in how she sees, and how she writes. After reading this perfectly crafted novel, I felt I was seeing a familiar world with a new set of eyes.
Malcolm Knox
Set in a shifting political landscape, where moral and ethical values are also blurred, this story of a family's unexpected dilemma resonates deeply. Georgia Blain examines the anxieties of a generation that has had so much, yet still lacks confidence, and trust. Her style is subtle but the story builds up a drama that compels us until the final page. Too Close To Home is almost too close to home: these flawed and fallible characters are people just like us.
Debra Adelaide
Her work is poised - and posed. Here is suburban life with its tremors of child-rearing and possible adultery. Be assured Too Close To Home is coming to a reading group near you.
Peter Pierce, The Age
Blain achieves a considerable amount. Characters and the crisis these characters precipitate is well crafted and well handled.
Dorothy Johnston, The Sydney Morning Herald
Blain writes of friendship and prejudice within a certain demographic strata. Must read.
Lucy Sussex, The Sunday Telegraph
Georgia Blain has crafted a page-turning story of a generation and a time in Australia's history that will deeply resonate with anyone in their 30s or 40s. Blain has created an excellent work of fiction and years from now people will read this novel to understand life in Sydney during this time.
Germaine Leece, Good Reading
Too Close To Home, like its inner-suburban setting, appears at first to be relaxed and unassuming, but what begins as a gentle undertow increases to unrelenting pressure.
Border Mail
In this sublime Australian novel, author Blain seamlessly crafts a contemporary tale in which one family's apparent domestic bliss is rocked by the arrival of an Aboriginal man with startling news. As the Rudd government implodes, Matt, Freya and daughter Ella suddenly are on equally unstable ground.
Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin
Blain has written an absorbing tale that never takes the easy way out, relentlessly disassembling her likeable protagonist's comfortable life.
Who
Blain has written a thoughtful novel with much to admire.
Lucy Sussex, Sunday Age
Blain's return to literary fiction is re-energised by this new emphasis on affect and impulse. Hers is the pep that comes from having an opposing view.
Melinda Harvey, ABR
The novel is peppered with provocative and interesting observations and ideas.
Felicity Plunkett, The Canberra Times
I finished reading Too Close To Home last night and just wanted to let you both know how much I loved it! What an effortless writer Georgia is and she captures the characters self doubt and fears so well. I felt that I was just observing a group of friends, through a mirror - almost with them, but just on the edge of the circle. I hope this gets widely reviewed. It certainly deserves high praise.
Stef Hoy
Confronting us with our own world, Georgia Blain gives us no safe distance.
Susan Stevenson, Readings Malvern