About the Author:
PAULA COCOZZA is a staff feature writer at The Guardian and has covered everything from soccer to fashion to fourth-wave feminism. Her writing, which has also appeared in Vogue, the Telegraph, the Independent, and the TLS, received the 2013 David Higham Award. Paula lives in London with her husband, two children, and a garden full of foxes. How to Be Human is her first novel.
Review:
"Hypnotic...In this suspenseful tale animal and human behaviour begins to meld, even reverse, and who's dangerous and who's endangered is not always clear." - The New York Times
"A singular love story of dominance and betrayal, this novel sets the tone for what will hopefully be a long and strange literary career." —Kirkus (starred)
"This is a compelling, unsettling, and wholly original debut." —Library Journal (Starred)
“A thrilling psychodrama that twists and turns with the residents of a few houses and their adjacent woods....Like the scent of a fox, truth and fact in How to be Human start to evaporate. What is left behind is a pervasive sense that beneath the veneer of civility, something wilder
is always lurking.” —The Economist
"There is much of [Ali] Smith’s playfulness in Paula Cocozza's enchanting debut...For all its suggestiveness and sensuality, [her] narrative is artfully restrained... In this startling debut, Paula Cocozza seems to be saying that, no matter how lonely the city becomes, through an open window a mass of life is listening back.” —The Times Literary Supplement
“Nicely balanced between the serious and the lighter-hearted, Cocozza’s novel is an engaging read.” —The Irish Times
“Cocozza pulls off the tricky task of marrying [two different narratives]. The results are unsettling, the writing often vivid and rich.” —The Observer
“Cocozza has a wonderful eye for detail, and her descriptions of the natural world are uncanny...One measure of a good book is that it makes you see the world slightly differently, and I know that, having read How to Be Human, I will never look at a fox in quite the same way again.” —The Guardian
“How to Be Human is an intriguing and subversive debut, an eerie tale that acts on the reader like a ghost story, charged with the power of the ignored and the suppressed. If we disdain our animal selves, they trail us, shadowing us at dawn and dusk. Paula Cocozza shows us that the line between the wilderness and the city is thin, easily transgressed; the ghost breathing in the thicket is our own wild nature.” —Hilary Mantel
“Intriguing and unsettling...the tricky, shifting substance of relationships is so insightfully drawn and constantly surprises.” —Laura Barnett, author of The Versions of Us
“Paula Cocozza's intense, fox-like powers of observation allow her to stalk the claims of territory and hidden wildness that energise this taut, shimmering novel.” —Richard Beard, author of The Acts of Assassins
“Unsettling, the writing often vivid and rich.” —Observer
“A crafted study in alienation.” —Sunday Times
“Cocozza’s brilliant debut novel [is] a beguiling, highly inventive story about loneliness and finding a place in the world... A disturbing humour underpins Mary’s voice, a mesmerising mix of delusion and discernment... The momentum is achieved through Cocozza’s edgy, atmospheric writing.” —Irish Times
“A writer who is clearly unafraid of launching herself with a bang... Compelling... We are reminded of how close to the surface primal instincts can prowl.” —Daily Telegraph
“In Gulf folk tales, the fox is a trickster. In the West, the mammal, which roams so many city settings, is nearly always described as wily or sly. But in Paula Cocozza’s claustrophobic, unsettling–yet engrossing–debut, the fox is something rather more fantastic.” —The National
“Sharp, thoughtful ... exhilarating ... the plot slips from urban pastoral to tense thriller.” —Newsweek
“Seeing foxes everywhere after reading this brilliant book.” —Stylist
“One of the most astonishing books I’ve ever read. Beautifully capturing the quiet torment of being a thirty-something at the end of a relationship . . . Sublime, and incredibly moving . . . READ IT and find yourself transfixed.” —Charlotte Philby
“This is fascinating stuff. A tale of obsession which is unsettling, powerful and hypnotic. An original debut.” —Sarah Broadhurst, Lovereading
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.