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Hydra
Hydra | Adriane Howell
3 posts | 3 read | 1 to read
Anja is a young, ambitious antiquarian, passionate for the clean and balanced lines of mid-century furniture. She is intent on classifying objects based on emotional response and when her career goes awry, Anja finds herself adrift. Like a close friend, she confesses her intimacies and rage to us with candour, tenderness, and humour. Cast out from the world of antiques, she stumbles upon a beachside cottage that the neighbouring naval base is offering for a 100-year lease. The property is derelict, isolated, and surrounded by scrub. Despite of, or because of, its wildness and solitude, Anja uses the last of the inheritance from her mother to lease the property. Yet a presence human, ghost, other seemingly inhabits the grounds. Hydra is a novel of dark suspense and mental disquiet, struck through with black humour., Adriane Howell beguilingly explores notions of moral culpability, revenge, memory, and narrative all through the female lens of freedom and constraint. She holds us captive to the last page. From the treacherous auction houses of Melbourne to the sun-struck islands of Greece, Hydra took me places I never expected to go. Adriane Howell writes with the dreamy precision of Marguerite Duras, the humour-laced disquiet of Patricia Highsmith. A fever dream of a debut elegant, savage, and delightfully unhinged. Laura Elizabeth Woollett, author of Beautiful Revolutionary and The Newcomer A puzzle box of creeping dread, Hydra had me questioning my own grasp on reality. This is sophisticated, genre-defying literary fiction of the first order. Bram Presser, author of The Book of Dirt Hydra crosses planes; it is superb, distinct, and breathtaking. It surprises, disturbs and enthrals at every turn. Angela Meyer, author of A Superior Spectre and Moon Sugar
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chapter_fifty2017
Hydra | Adriane Howell
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Pickpick

Really enjoyed this book by a debut author, its about a life that decontructs from inside out. Her mother dies" her marriage ends then she loses her job . She buys a house by the sea and is hunted . Although it untangles at the end there is a lot to keep thinking about.

CarolynM I must have missed something with this one, I really didn‘t like it. 12mo
chapter_fifty2017 I understand , she wasn't the most likeable of characters 🤔 11mo
8 likes2 comments
review
Jeg
Hydra | Adriane Howell
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Pickpick

My 2nd Stella shortlist read. I‘m still thinking about this book. I liked it but not sure why. There were ,for me ,a few loose ends. Like you might have in a dream. It‘s set on a lonely piece of land near a naval base and nature reserve. There is an unknown real or perceived threat hanging about. The narrator is maybe a bit unstable mentally . She has been working with mid century “ antiques and I loved her encounters with a Susie Cooper tea set⬇️

Jeg I think I‘ll be thinking about this one for a while. I often can‘t find the words I need. (edited) 12mo
CarolynM I think I must have missed something with this book. I really didn‘t like it. I found most of her actions unfathomable and the stuff about the military base was just weird! 12mo
10 likes2 comments
review
CarolynM
Hydra | Adriane Howell
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Panpan

I‘m sorry to say it, but I think this is just bad. The writing is fine but the story isn‘t. The MC does a lot of reckless (stupid?) things for no apparent reason and her backstory was not sufficient to make me sympathetic. Then there is the weird parallel story of something that went on in the military base that borders her property. I kept reading in the hope that there would be a sensible conclusion. There wasn‘t. #ozfiction #bookspin

LeahBergen Well, at least your flowers are lovely. 😆 1y
Tamra Shoot - I always feel cross when I push through for naught. 1y
TheAromaofBooks Sometimes it feels like an author tries too hard to be clever and just end up with a story that doesn't make sense 😕 1y
63 likes3 comments