Lucy Ellmann's first novel, Sweet Desserts, won the Guardian Fiction Prize. It was followed by Varying Degrees of Hopelessness, Man or Mango? A Lament, Dot in the Universe, Doctors & Nurses, Mimi. Her short stories have appeared in magazines, newspapers and anthologies, and she has written for the New York Times, Washington Post, Guardian, Independent, Independent on Sunday, Times Literary Supplement, Telegraph, New Statesman and Society, Spectator, Herald, Scottish Review of Books, Time Out (London), Art Monthly, Thirsty Books, Bookforum, Aeon, The Evergreen, and The Baffler. A screenplay, The Spy Who Caught a Cold, was filmed and broadcast on Channel 4 in the UK. She edits fiction for the Fiction Atelier (fictionatelier.wordpress.com), and abhors standard ways of teaching Creative Writing, which she considers mostly criminal. Though American by birth, she lives in Scotland.
PRAISE FOR DUCKS, NEWBURYPORT
"Lucy Ellmann's Ducks, Newburyport offers a radical literary form
and voice. Dense to look at, challengingly epic, the novel is built
around one Ohio housewife's monologue, flowing with dazzling
lightness and speed. The detritus and maddening complexity of
domesticity unfold in one breath, over a thousand pages. Shards of
film plot and song collide with climate change anxiety; the terrors
of parenting, healthcare and shopping lists wrestle with fake news
and gun culture. The narrator reverberates with humour, wordplay
and political rage. The writing resonates like a dissonant yet
recognisable American symphony for massive forces, with riffs and
themes folding back, proliferating, and gradually cohering. Its one
long sentence occasionally breaks to simply describe a mountain
lioness and her cubs: a meditation on nurture that will be wrapped
into the violence of the ending. Lucy Ellmann has written a
genre-defying novel, a torrent on modern life, as well as a hymn to
loss and grief. Her creativity and sheer obduracy make demands on
the reader. But Ellmann's daring is exhilarating ― as are the wit,
humanity and survival of her unforgettable narrator." --Booker
Prize Judge, Joanna MacGregor
"Lucy Ellmann's Ducks, Newburyport offers a radical literary form
and voice. Dense to look at, challengingly epic, the novel is built
around one Ohio housewife's monologue, flowing with dazzling
lightness and speed. The detritus and maddening complexity of
domesticity unfold in one breath, over a thousand pages. Shards of
film plot and song collide with climate change anxiety; the terrors
of parenting, healthcare and shopping lists wrestle with fake news
and gun culture. The narrator reverberates with humour, wordplay
and political rage. The writing resonates like a dissonant yet
recognisable American symphony for massive forces, with riffs and
themes folding back, proliferating, and gradually cohering. Its one
long sentence occasionally breaks to simply describe a mountain
lioness and her cubs: a meditation on nurture that will be wrapped
into the violence of the ending. Lucy Ellmann has written a
genre-defying novel, a torrent on modern life, as well as a hymn to
loss and grief. Her creativity and sheer obduracy make demands on
the reader. But Ellmann's daring is exhilarating--as are the wit,
humanity and survival of her unforgettable narrator." --2019 Booker
Prize Jury Citation
"This book has its face pressed up against the pane of the present;
its form mimics the way our minds move now toggling between tabs,
between the needs of small children and aging parents, between news
of ecological collapse and school shootings while somehow
remembering to pay taxes and fold the laundry...The capaciousness
of the book allows Ellmann to stretch and tell the story of one
family on a canvas that stretches back to the bloody days of
Western expansion, but its real value feels deeper -- it demands
the very attentiveness, the care, that it enshrines."--Parul
Sehgal, New York Times
"Written as a single sentence stretching more than 1,000 pages,
this remarkable 2019 novel thrums with life."--New York Times
"Brilliantly ambitious...At times there's such fury to these
ruminations that the book seems to shift into direct cultural
critique; at other times it all seems simply part of the
story...The lioness offers a foil, a figure of natural instinct and
maternal courage set against the narrator's culturally determined
fears and insecurities...This is a novel, but it is also,
fundamentally, a very long and meaningful list...as accumulative,
as pointed, as death-addled, as joyous, as storied, as
multitudinous and as large as life." --Martin Riker, New York Times
Book Review
"Ellmann captures the pathos of the everyday, how one might use pie
crusts and film synopses to dam in pain. She also allows the
narrator's avoidance to suggest a greater amnesia, an American
reluctance to face its past and its ongoing brutalities. The
narrator lives in a country whose mythic propositions hang in the
same limbo as her run-on sentence...Ellmann's commitment to
compilation and description suggests a resistance to hierarchies.
It also flickers with tenderness. The time and care that she
lavishes on her narrator seem like their own form of political
speculation--that every individual is owed an unending devotion,
and that such devotion, applied universally, might change the fate
of the world." --New Yorker
"Effervescent...as the book closes in on the thrilling -- and
unexpected -- conclusion, the disparate strands tossed out at the
novel's onset gleam with import...Ducks, Newburyport directs us
back to the language on the page, so we become hyper-aware of
it...Ellmann has made a case that a richer, less regimented
language leads to a more vibrant and capacious mind, and has thus
crafted the entrancing Ducks, Newburyport into a celebration of all
that words, and the minds they build, can contain." --Chicago
Review of Books
"A sublime literary enactment of how guilt, grief, rage, regret,
compassion, and every other emotion swirls and ebbs in unbalanced
defiance of rational logic...The very form of Ducks, Newburyport is
perhaps the ultimate expression of life's absurd
disproportionality...The free-associative stream accumulates into a
work of great formal beauty, whose distinctive linguistic rhythms
and patterns envelop the reader like music or poetry. Equally, it
forms a damning indictment on capitalist patriarchy that, in an
extraordinary feat from a writer at the height of her powers, never
veers within a mile of sanctimony or self-righteousness. If art is
measured by how skillfully it holds a mirror up to society, then
Ellmann has surely written the most important novel of this era. "
--The Paris Review
"Breathlessly brilliant ... an extraordinary achievement of wit and
imagination ... this isn't just one of the outstanding books of
2019, it's one of the outstanding books of the century." --The
Irish Times
"Ulysses has nothing on this ... Once you get going, you'll be too
absorbed to stop." --Cosmopolitan
"Could possibly turn out to be the most important novel of the
decade ... Read Ducks, Newburyport. This is a novel for the idea of
America today." --Los Angeles Review of Books
"Eccentric and recursive, its language eschews modernism's tangled
poetry for something more recognizably contemporary. The detritus
of digital and popular culture is embedded, shard-like, in the mesh
of the narrator's ever-unspooling mind...Her heroine's anger burns
cleanly, refusing the easy conflagration of self-righteousness. The
cumulative effect is devastating. This is a powerful and deeply
felt indictment of American moral failure, a fearful, dazzling
bloom of conscience...The narrative technique of Ducks, Newburyport
is itself a kind of coping mechanism, a grand mimetic achievement.
The novel's length is, in the end, something of the point." --The
Nation
"There are novels, and then there are extraordinary novels--truly
unique, one-of-a-kind, sui generis--terms that are often used as
clichés but I assure you not in Lucy Ellmann's case, regarding her
eighth novel, Ducks, Newburyport...a truly great American novel
that catches our zeitgeist more accurately during the Trump years
than anything else I have read...Ellmann has crawled into the
horrifying times in which we live and written an explosive story
that will engage you on every one of its 1000 pages."
--CounterPunch
"It's a book that quite restores our faith in the possibility of
literary 'greatness' while questioning what forms such 'greatness'
can or should take. It is certainly, in its humane range and
weight, a Great American Novel. Is it any good? Oh my word, yes.
Reading it at this point in times seems like an act of human
solidarity, a commitment to the world of truth and reason."
--Literary Review
"Brilliant -- and addictive...There have been comparisons to James
Joyce's Ulysses, but Ellmann is in a class by herself."
--Associated Press
"Readers need not scoff this giant pie in one gulp. Sampled at
regular intervals, it tastes sweeter. The sheer ingenuity of Ms
Ellmann's wordplay, the fabulous profusion of her recipes,
catalogues and inventories, from a freezer's contents to
confectionery brands, imbue every passage with fun as well as a
sardonic poetry." --Economist
Ducks, Newburyport is a menacing novel, a masterpiece of precision
and endurance. This is the sort of book you'll pick up and be
baffled for the first 10 or 20 pages, but by the 30th page, you'll
be home." --Thrillist
"Ducks is a technical masterpiece and kind of literary
manifesto...a staggeringly provocative work of genius." --Toronto
Star
"Ducks, Newburyport is a complex book about a complicated time. It
reads like an outpour of humanity beckoning to be heard."
--Electric Literature
"Resplendent in ambition, humour and humanity ... a lifetime of
memories hoarded and pored over, like the family heirlooms the
narrator and her husband have inherited along with all the joy and
desolation contained within them ... In Ducks, Newburyport Ellmann
has created a wisecracking, melancholy Mrs Dalloway for the
internet age." --Financial Times
"Perhaps the most intensely real depiction of the life of the
quotidian mind I've ever witnessed... what Ducks [Newburyport]
amounts to is one great trauma diagnosis for the entire
country...It's a colossal feat." --The Spectator
"A book about a mother's love, but also about loss and grief, and
anxiety dreams about Donald Trump, and despair about mass shootings
... It is also a catalogue of life's many injuries and mishaps ...
and of the simple joys and consolations of memory and imagination.
[A] triumph." --The Guardian
"Epic." --Associated Press
"A jaw-dropping miracle." --Library Journal (starred review)
"A remarkable portrait of a woman in contemporary America
contemplating her own life and society's storm clouds ...
brilliant." --Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Mesmerizing, witty, maximalist...a bravura and caring inquiry into
Earth's glory, human creativity and catastrophic recklessness, and
the transcendence of love." --Booklist (starred review)
"In Ducks, Newburyport the invisible expropriation of women's
domestic labour is tied to the despoiling of the environment and
the macho degradation of the public sphere. But this is to suggest
the novel can be boiled down to one particular theme, when its
entire premise refuses any kind of summary. In reading Ducks,
wonder gives way to frustration, which gives way to wonder again,
until finishing becomes a kind of contemplative vigil - an exercise
in dedication...Ducks is asking us to imagine what a total,
unboundaried empathy with another person could feel like." --New
Statesman
"This is one of the most bonkers, but absolutely brilliant, novels
I have ever read...by turns poignant, funny, repetitive, poetic,
banal and wise...this is a brave and bracing book for both author
and publisher to have -produced, and in the sheer commitment it
demands of the reader is a brilliant antidote to the simplistic
realm of clickbait, acronyms and sloganeering that the novel
describes and critiques so well. Bravo!" --The Tablet
"A wildly ambitious and totally unique masterpiece of the kind that
doesn't frequently appear in contemporary fiction...Once or twice
while reading a novel, you might encounter an image in passing that
suddenly knocks you out of the book and into a dreamy state, a
little detail that jumps out at you and consumes your attention for
a moment. This happens so often in "Ducks" that reading the book
can be like a collection of immediately interesting objects, like
that specific kind of American home so stuffed with objects that
every moment is one of discovery. The material culture of American
life is splayed across these pages." --Michigan Daily
"Innovative, intelligent, and simply extraordinary." --Lit Hub
"A wildly ambitious and righteously angry portrait of contemporary
America." --The Observer
"It is a soaring example of how a gifted writer can spin one
sentence into a complete, immersive story." --Financial Times
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