Claire Fuller - The Memory of Animals

Claire Fuller - The Memory of Animals

24th Jun 2023 6pm - 7:30pm
British Summer Time
Add to Calendar
2023-06-24 18:00:00 2023-06-24 19:30:00 Europe/London Claire Fuller - The Memory of Animals 2 Vicarage Road, Kings Heath, Birmingham, B14 7RA

Tickets

Booking Refund
Insurance

Admission plus one copy of The Memory of Animals
E-Ticket
£19.00 + Free handling

Sale Ended

Admission Only
E-Ticket
£5.00 + Free handling

Sale Ended

Event Details

CLAIRE FULLER - THE MEMORY OF ANIMALS

We are ridiculously excited to welcome Costa-Winning, Women’s Prize-shortlisted author of Unsettled Ground, Claire Fuller, to Kings Heath!

CLAIRE FULLER

Claire Fuller was born in Oxfordshire, England, in 1967. She gained a degree in sculpture from Winchester School of Art, but went on to have a long career in marketing and didn’t start writing until she was forty. She has written four previous novels: Unsettled Ground, which in 2021 won the Costa Novel Award and was shortlisted for the Women’s Prize for Fiction, Our Endless Numbered Days, which won the Desmond Elliott Prize, Swimming Lessons, which was shortlisted for the RSL Encore Award, and Bitter Orange. She has an MA in Creative and Critical Writing from the University of Winchester and lives in Hampshire with her husband.

THE MEMORY OF ANIMALS

Neffy is a young woman running away from grief and guilt and the one big mistake that has derailed her career. When she answers the call to volunteer in a controlled vaccine trial, it offers her a way to pay off her many debts and, perhaps, to make up for the past.

But when the London streets below her window fall silent, and all external communications cease, only Neffy and four other volunteers remain in the unit. With food running out, and a growing sense that the strangers she is with may be holding back secrets, Neffy has questions that no-one can answer. Does safety lie inside or beyond the unit? And who, or what is out there?

While she weighs up her choices, she is introduced to a pioneering and controversial technology which allows her to revisit memories from her life before: a childhood divided between her enigmatic mother and her father in his small hotel in Greece. Intoxicated by the freedom of the past and the chance to reunite with those she loves, she increasingly turns away from her perilous present. But in this new world where survival rests on the bonds between strangers, is she jeopardising any chance of a future?

‘Claire Fuller is such an interesting and original writer and she has produced another literary page-turner. Compulsive and thoroughly convincing. Terrific!’ Clare Chambers, author of Small Pleasures