Robbie Arnott’s acclaimed debut, Flames (2018), won a Sydney Morning Herald Best Young Novelist award and a Tasmanian Premier’s Literary Prize, and was shortlisted for a Victorian Premier’s Literary Award, a New South Wales Premier’s Literary Award, a Queensland Literary Award, the Readings Prize for New Australian Fiction and the Not the Booker Prize. His follow-up, The Rain Heron (2020), won the Age Book of the Year award, and was shortlisted for the Miles Franklin Literary Award, the ALS Gold Medal, the Voss Literary Prize and an Adelaide Festival Award. He lives in Hobart.
‘Robbie Arnott is the sort of young writer we all hoped would
emerge in Australia, a Conrad-like storyteller whose tales always
tremble on the edge of the mythic and legendary. And as well as
being a splendid narrator of tales, he has a quality too easily
overlooked now. He writes beautifully! May his readers and his
rewards abound!’
*Thomas Keneally*
‘Limberlost is as close to flawless as any book I have read in
years. The poise and precision of Arnott’s writing lends restraint
to the fury at Limberlost’s heart.’
*Jessie Greengrass, author of The High House*
‘Spectacular and stunning…Deeply moving.’
*Nick Bradley, author of The Cat and the City*
‘Ned—with his shame and pride—blazes his way into your heart. A
tender, soaring novel from one of Australia’s finest writers.’
*Sisonke Msimang*
‘An exquisitely moving and intimate story that is more rooted in
realism than Arnott’s previous works, but still carries the wonder
and subtle magic his writing is known for…Arnott masterfully
explores masculinity, brotherhood and familial love…Limberlost is
another astonishing book from one of Australia’s most electrifying
young authors.’
*Books+Publishing*
‘An unforgettable story, humble, transporting, and filled with
grace and bravery. It’s one of the strongest things I’ve read for a
very long time.’
*Cynan Jones, author of The Dig and Cove*
‘Robbie Arnott’s best so far…Perfectly balanced, just
exquisite.’
*Rachel Edwards*
‘This book is something special: tender, sad, exceptionally well
written [and] unexpectedly moving.’
*Ashleigh Wilson*
‘Robbie Arnott is a tremendously talented and unique voice in
Australian literature, and his third novel, Limberlost, exceeded
all my expectations. It is a gorgeously written coming-of-age
novel…a touching and profound depiction of connection, grief and
familial love…Limberlost is much more grounded in realism than
Arnott’s previous novels…but still holds the same sense of
wonder.’
*Readings*
‘Limberlost is an immersive experience, a story that is deeply
embedded in the language of its environment, drawing much of its
power from the places that surround and inform its
characters…Though scaled right down to a single, humble life,
Limberlost is lit up by the energy of that life’s relationships. It
serves as a reminder of the complicated position humans occupy,
tangled as we are in the webs of interdependence, of pain and
responsibility and care, that bind us to a world much greater than
ourselves.’
*Australian Book Review*
‘In Limberlost magic lies in lyrical language and the powerfully
real characters brought to life through it…This is a novel about
the deepest of emotions, about love, the fear of loss, and about
joy.’
*Age*
‘It’s immersive, it’s emotional…A beautiful book…Glorious.’
*ABC Radio Hobart*
‘Arnott’s style has tempered into something rich and singing…[His]
writing of the natural world is elegiac and elemental…[Limberlost
has] a breathtakingly moving final scene.’
*Guardian*
‘Quiet wisdom [conveyed in a] potent and exquisitely crafted
depiction of the delicate relationship between people and
place.’
*Matilda Bookshop*
‘The ambition of Limberlost and the complex questioning that
underpins it are fascinating and lend the book a hauntedness that
is deeply affecting. Ned’s sensitivity, his striving and his
jumbled, tightly held emotions are always handled with great
subtlety, and Arnott’s deep compassion for his characters and
willingness to leave space for all that is unanswerable make
Limberlost a striking book, with lingering resonance and great
heart.’
*Saturday Paper*
‘[Limberlost] is a beautifully-written and moving novel, and
certainly one of the best books I’ve read all year…A coming-of-age
story which lasts a lifetime.’
*David Griggs, Through the Biblioscope*
‘Limberlost is a tender study of the dangers of averting our
gaze…[with] vivid writing of the more-than-human world.’
*Sydney Review of Books*
‘[Arnott’s novels] are just so good…There is so much tenderness and
beauty and love [in Limberlost]…A gorgeous read…Arnott is a
beautiful writer…I shed a little tear at the end.’
*ABC RN Breakfast*
‘Outstanding…The writing in this book is so beautiful…so
evocative.’
*ABC RN Book Show*
‘[Limberlost] is thoughtful, insightful realism in exquisite
prose…[it] is a beautiful textured novel.’
*ANZ LitLovers*
‘Arnott is one of the most exciting authors in Australia…He
completes his literary hat-trick with Limberlost, a stunning
novel…This is a book about violence and fear, but there’s a great
tenderness, too…Not a word is wasted. Limberlost is powerful,
lyrical and packs a hell of an emotional punch. It’s one of the
best books I’ve read this year.’
*ABC Arts*
‘Creatures loom wondrously in this lyrical novel…The animal kingdom
around Ned bursts with language…Powerful…As the novel progresses
Arnott ventures into more wistful territory…[He expertly] captures
Ned’s autumn of life.’
*Sunday Times (UK)*
‘Arnott’s writing has understated elegance and lilts to poetic
rhythms. Its beauty hides an emotional punch made more powerful by
its slow reveal…The writing is magnificent, and the
characterisation of Ned is superb. A must-read novel.’
*Good Reading*
‘Extraordinarily imaginative…His writing is so exquisite…Full of
striking images.’
*ABC TV Weekend Breakfast*
‘The magic is definitely present in [Limberlost] in the power of
[Robbie Arnott’s] writing…Australian fiction at its best.’
*Coast Magazine*
‘[Arnott’s] ability to write sublimely about nature has never been
in doubt. But what characterises Limberlost as a triumph is how the
author manages to illustrate the simple poignancy of human
drama.’
*Meanjin*
‘Limberlost is frequently exquisite…Its writing is alert to the
language and imagery of mythology, and attuned to the living
world…Arnott writes beautiful sentences.’
*Conversation*
‘The descriptions of the natural world are wonderfully vivid.’
*Daily Mail (UK)*
‘A luminously told, whole-life story of a young boy discovering how
to be his own man…Arnott has an eye and an ear for description that
can elevate otherwise quiet moments to something genuinely
transcendent.’
*Guardian (UK)*
‘Tender and often exquisitely moving…An intimate
portrait…Limberlost doesn’t claim to answer all of the complex
questions it raises…However, in its haunted quality and understated
sense of wonder, it does succeed in capturing some of the
complexity of our relationships with the natural world.’
*West Australian*
‘Arnott’s third novel carries echoes of Ernest Hemingway’s
masterpiece…It could be read as a sort of The Young Man and the
Sea: a beautiful, pared-back exploration of masculinity, and the
sustaining nature of dreams…Limberlost is a sensory rollercoaster.
Arnott’s writing is unadorned, but thrillingly visceral…The joy of
Limberlost, beyond the writing, is that, in Arnott’s rendering,
nature is not always something to be wondered at, then subdued. The
book is flecked with violence and rot, but there is much
tenderness, too.’
*Big Issue (UK)*
‘Masterful storytelling.’
*BookPeople*
‘Unutterably beautiful.’
*Gleebooks*
‘There is mastery in the way [Robbie Arnott] captures the beauty
and ferocity of the natural environment…Limberlost tracks the
texture of memory and time…The essence of longing saturates the
narrative, for a time lost and a future yet to be inhabited.’
*ArtsHub*
‘Finely told…[Reminds] us that the quintessence of our
country…should remain indelible in our collective memory and
perhaps be elevated into the realm of the heroic.’
*Australian*
‘Filled with wonder and reverence…Arnott has traded in the magical
realism of his previous work for a deep sense of the personal, and
the result is equally transcendent and immersive.’
*Big Issue*
‘Highly recommended…[Robbie Arnott is] at the peak of his
game.’
*Herald Sun*
‘Robbie Arnott is establishing himself as one of Australia's best
novelists…Beautifully written…For all those people who are waiting
for the next Tim Winton novel.’
*Fairfield Books*
‘Robbie Arnott cements his reputation as one of Australia’s most
affecting storytellers…Arnott uses the colours and creatures of the
natural world to populate Ned’s world.’
*Australian*
‘Sentences sublime.’
*Pip Williams*
‘A gem.’
*Michael Winkler*
‘[Limberlost] further underlines [Arnott’s] mastery of nature
writing.’
*Jock Serong*
‘Singing prose…This coming-of-age story confirms Robbie Arnott as a
masterly writer of eco-fiction.’
*The Times (UK)*
‘One of the great reading experiences of the year…Just
perfect.’
*ABC Radio Melbourne*
‘A pitch-perfect story steeped in beautiful writing about the
natural world.’
*Age*
‘The end of the story fashions an extraordinary emotional catharsis
in the lead character, bringing a closure that I’ve not seen
executed well elsewhere in literature. This novel will win a swag
of awards in 2023, mark my words.’
*Triple R*
‘Never have I read the natural world, or masculinity, written like
it…Robbie Arnott has fundamentally (and with such terrible, aching
tenderness) nailed it.’
*Helen Jukes, author of A Honeybee Heart has Five Openings*
‘Absolutely exquisite on every level.’
*Karen Ginnane*
‘Poignant…Arnott’s beautifully descriptive language shows his love
of the Tasmanian landscape, as he allows Ned to find deep solace in
the nature that surrounds him.’
*Openbook*
‘Sturdy writing about humble, decent people. [Limberlost] is the
work of an author sufficiently confident in his powers that he
tailors his style to the story. In so doing [Robbie Arnott] has
produced a gem sure to give readers joy for years to come.’
*2023 Age Book of the Year for Fiction judges comments*
‘Limberlost is a book about many things—a quoll, a boat, a war, a
whale—but it is often at its most profound when exploring the
complex relationships between its male characters. The injuries
they carry, the many ways in which they are smothered and unhappy.
But also gentler shades of masculinity—their humility, dignity,
quiet strength and acts of love.’
*Emma Harvey, Wattle*
‘Arnott writes in a lyrical and evocative way, immersing readers in
the abundant and untamed beauty of the Tasmanian wilderness…He
masterfully captures the awe and wonder of the natural
environment…Arnott is establishing himself as one of Australia’s
best novelists; Limberlost is beautifully written and for fans of
Richard Flanagan and Tim Winton.’
*Coast Community News*
‘Arnott connects characters with each other and with nature in
burnished, spare prose, relying on precision and quietness, rather
than showiness or sentiment, to hit its marks.’
*Galah*
‘Epic in its themes…Seemingly small moments echo and become
amplified through the years. [Limberlost] makes you feel all is
momentarily right with the world.’
*Books+Publishing*
‘Brimming with elegant considered prose…Left me lingering in a
state of contemplative melancholy for days, my favourite state to
be in after reading a good book.’
*Albany Advertiser*
‘Limberlost is remembrance: of childhood and manhood; of land both
lost and gained. It crafts a boy’s adolescence of hopeful imagining
countered by the inevitable truth of duty and loss.’
*Dublin Literary Awards, State Library of NSW*
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