'I truly love and admire Nicole Flattery’s writing. Show Them a Good Time is a masterclass in the short story – bold, irreverent and agonisingly funny – and it does full justice to its author’s immense talent’ SALLY ROONEY
Nicole Flattery’s work has been published in the Stinging Fly, the White Review, the Dublin Review, BBC Radio 4, the Irish Times, Winter Papers and the forthcoming 2019 Faber anthology of new Irish writing. Her story ‘Track’ won the 2017 White Review Short Story Prize. She is twenty-nine years old and lives in Galway.
Highly addictive
*Observer*
These stories are very funny, and very sad, usually at the same
time. Which, as Flattery shows us brilliantly, is the best time
*Jon McGregor*
Exhilarating. Flattery’s judgments crackle with cruel, clear sight
... Flattery writes with empathy, freedom and virtuosic
technique
*Financial Times*
Smart as a whip, unusual, and very very funny, Flattery's
distinctive prose is a real treat
*Claire-Louise Bennett*
Filled with dark, daring and compassionate fables of womanhood
*Stylist*
Flattery tells the truth but tells it slant, so that from her
sentences, to her symbolism, to her zany, often surrealist plots,
her stories fizz with humour and surprise
*Irish Independent*
Reverberates with a strange tension and fine sentences
*Hisham Matar*
I truly love and admire Nicole Flattery’s writing. Show Them a Good
Time is a masterclass in the short story – bold, irreverent and
agonisingly funny – and it does full justice to its author’s
immense talent
*Sally Rooney*
A bright new voice in Irish literature. Think early Lorrie Moore,
or the stories that launched Anne Enright’s career. Flattery brings
the reader through this world with ease, mixing the absurd with the
workaday, trauma with humour
*Irish Times*
At its best, which is often, Flattery’s prose has a thrilling
relentlessness and rhythmical snap to it; it pummels and
excites
*Guardian*
Startling, daring and dazzlingly dark
*Colin Barrett*
Flattery is the latest wave of a recent dam burst of Irish talent,
including Sally Rooney, Kevin Barry and Danielle McLaughlin. She
has a true storyteller’s ability to make a few words do a lot. The
stories in Show Them a Good Time explore difficult questions about
self-worth, agency and intimacy with thrilling sharpness
*Sunday Times*
Like Sally Rooney, Flattery is adept at capturing millennial
culture, but her voice is more distinctive in its daring, eccentric
intelligence. This is a collection which lives up to its hype
*Spectator*
Brutal, disorientating and bold … Filled with appetite, anger and
compelling characters … Flattery is 29, and the themes that run
through the work of many of the young Irish writers currently
exhibiting such brilliant form – from Sally Rooney to Sinead
Gleeson – also flit through her collection … Some of these pieces
reminded me a lot of Deborah Levy, and particularly her earlier
stories: brutal, disorientating, filled with appetite, anger and
characters who seem to spring from nowhere and everywhere at the
same time
*New Statesman*
There’s laughter in the dark and darkness in the laughter in these
fabulously astute stories that are at once surreal and more real
than reality. Nicole Flattery is so good
*Melissa Broder, author of 'The Pisces'*
If tradition is the kitchen sink, Flattery removes it from the
wall, smashes it to pieces, and dances all over it with delight.
With a literary voice that is as sophisticated and erudite as it is
spiky and hilarious, Flattery has taken the short story format into
an exciting, energetic, and multifaceted dimension
*Sunday Independent*
An urgent and exuberant debut short story collection
*Guardian*
Not only distractingly brilliant, it will make you wild with
envy
*Caroline O’Donoghue*
One of the best short story collections I’ve read in a long while …
Bleakly hilarious, dark, weird. Read it!
*Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett*
This collection woke me up and sucked me in. By turns absurdist,
frightening and funny, Flattery's writing is never less than
dazzling
*Julia Armfield*
Irish women writers are on fire, and Nicole Flattery is yet a
further brilliant example … Ten smart stories about dating,
relationships and the absurdities of modern life
*Elle*
In recent years a vanguard of Irish writers, mostly women, has
emerged to continue an Irish tradition: that of punching above its
own literary weight. Flattery is its latest lodestar ... Flattery's
work is striking from the get-go: exuberant, absurd, relevant but
often oblique ... Tonally, [the stories] are at times reminiscent
of the Greek film director Yorgos Lanthimos’ deadpan, uncanny
valley absurdism
*Totally Dublin*
This tour de force lurches into outright absurdism, and is
reminiscent of acclaimed US author Nell Zink at her most playful.
Flattery is a fresh new voice and I can’t wait to see what she does
next
*The Crack*
The first time I read Nicole Flattery I was captivated - the voice,
the word choice, the oddest dramaturgical line. I thought, my god,
she could be the Irish Miranda July
*Irish Times*
A ridiculously fantastic, funny and daring writer
*John Patrick McHugh*
Show Them A Good Time by Nicole Flattery is enthralling from start
to finish … Flattery is assured in her words, her style evident
from page to page
*Storgy*
I first encountered Nicole Flattery's work through the Stinging
Fly, and I'm forever grateful I did
*Sally Rooney*
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