<i>Scaffolding</i> is like a perfect French movie of a novel…but it is elevated by the writer’s<b> elegant, original and often very funny prose</b>

New Statesman, *Books of the Year*

<b>Intelligent, sexy and brilliantly observed</b>

Stylist

[<i>Scaffolding</i> is] <b>atmospheric and evocative,</b> the prose elegant and poised

Observer, *Books to Look Out For 2024*

Se alle

<i>Scaffolding </i>is an ambitious, multi-generational book that reckons with legacy and feminist resistance…truly fascinating… <b>a provocative study</b>

i

'Lauren Elkin is a writer than can jump between genres so seamlessly, she <b>deserves to be a household name</b>...Elkin continues to dazzle with her keen observations and reflective prose'

Glamour

'An unabashedly philosophical novel — one that <b>keeps the reader hooked by the sensuality of its prose'</b>

Erica Wagner, Financial Times

Elkin’s first novel is a brainy sex comedy… <b><i>Scaffolding</i> joins books by Rachel Cusk and Deborah Levy, and as an erudite lust quadrilateral interested in ethical quandaries…</b> There’s no shortage of excitement in the twists supplied by what each character doesn’t know (or chooses to hide or ignore) about one another

Observer

A <b>compelling </b>work of fiction… the book will linger long in the reader’s heart and mind

Harper's Bazaar

[<i>Scaffolding</i>] unspools layers of psychic history to ask questions about the nature of desire and the possibility, or not, of intimacy…<i> </i>Anna’s first-person vice…is <b>immersive</b>. The conversations she reports feel authentic, with mundanities jostling up against profundities

Times Literary Supplement

<i>Scaffolding</i> shows off Elkin’s rich, scholarly mind to great effect… a book laden with lust and desire…<b> I expect to see Elkin’s debut feature on many end-of-year lists, and deservedly so</b>

Frieze

<i>Scaffolding</i> is absolutely a novel of ideas…The prose is as well crafted as Elkin’s nonfiction leads us to expect, and the characters are very finely developed… <b>Not every good essayist should write a novel, but we should be glad Lauren Elkin did</b>

Guardian

<b><i>'Scaffolding </i>is ingenious and febrile</b>, delving into the intimacy and implacability of those awakening connections that layer, echoing, throughout our lives - doing so in ways that feel all at once vital, playful, profoundly moving. It’s <b>a beautifully fluid meditation</b> on what is at stake, and who we become, when we desire.'

Sophie Mackintosh

'<b>A subtle, sexy, exquisitely written jewel of a book'</b>

Melissa Febos, author of Girlhood

<i>'<b>Scaffolding</b></i><b> is a quietly incendiary disquisition on desire and containment, </b>on the bonds that make and unmake us. It seized me wholly ... a powerful testament to the idea that what we want might obliterate us, and fearlessly reckons with the equally high stakes of pretending otherwise.'

Daisy Lafarge

'My week – my life! – has been hugely improved by this compulsive, twisting story of psychoanalysis, politics and the weirdness of inhabitation itself. Elkin writes about the wrong-headedness and right-headedness of desire with high intelligence spliced with voluble wit, and a dark clarity spliced with generosity.'

Lara Feigel

'Be warned: this novel will absorb you, disassemble you, and leave you strangely unwilling to put yourself back together again. Read it, reread it, then give it to your friends and teachers, your relatives and your lovers.'

Devorah Baum

'<b>Lauren Elkin’s <i>Scaffolding </i>is a novel that's remarkable for its combination of intellectual toughness and sensual precision. </b>This investigation into multiple forms of exposure – inhabited by an array of chords and repeats and hauntings – feels urgently contemporary.’

Adam Thirlwell

'I time travelled with Lauren Elkin and found myself in a Parisian apartment soaking in human stories and palpitating with new discoveries as I turned each page. What <b>a rich, tantalising narrative defying conventions</b>, which could only ever have been written by an author who has experienced a multiplicity of lives and the true meaning of home.'

Xiaolu Guo

<b>This perplexing and intriguing novel is worth it…</b> this is a novel that will make you think – about relationships, about what our memories and our identities mean when we try to end them or begin them

Big Issue

<i>Scaffolding</i> is <b>a multi-layered, intelligent novel</b>

i

Scaffolding is like a perfect French movie of a novel…elegant, original and often very funny’ Kevin Barry, New Statesman Books of the Year

Two couples inhabit the same apartment in Paris, almost fifty years apart…

2019. When David takes a job in London, Anna is left alone in their Paris apartment. It’s August and the city is deserted but when Clémentine moves into the building, Anna finds herself drawn inextricably into the younger woman’s world…

1972. Florence is finishing her degree in psychology and contemplating pregnancy. But Henry isn’t sure he’s ready for fatherhood and both have distractions outside their marriage…

As the two couples face the challenges of marriage and fidelity, the characters and their ghosts bump into and weave around each other, not knowing that they once all inhabited the same space.

‘Intelligent, sexy and brilliantly observed’ Stylist

‘Atmospheric and evocative’ Observer

Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781529932942
Publisert
2025-06-12
Utgiver
Vendor
Vintage
Vekt
200 gr
Høyde
198 mm
Bredde
129 mm
Dybde
35 mm
Aldersnivå
01, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
400

Forfatter

Biographical note

Lauren Elkin is the author of several books, including Flâneuse: Women Walk the City, a Radio 4 Book of the Week, a New York Times Notable Book of 2017, and a finalist for the PEN/Diamonstein-Spielvogel award for the art of the essay. Her essays on art, literature, and culture have appeared in the London Review of Books, the New York Times, Granta, Harper's, Le Monde, Les Inrockuptibles, and Frieze, among others. She is also an award-winning translator, most recently of Simone de Beauvoir's previously unpublished novel The Inseparables. After twenty years in Paris, she now lives in London.