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Fiction Contemporary Women

Sludge Utopia

A Novel

by (author) Catherine Fatima

narrator Ashley Tredenick

Publisher
ECW Press
Initial publish date
Aug 2019
Category
Contemporary Women, Literary, Biographical
  • Downloadable audio file

    ISBN
    9781773054544
    Publish Date
    Aug 2019
    List Price
    $28.99

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Description

In a kind of ‘Catherine Millet meets Roland Barthes baring of life with hints of the work of Chris Kraus’, Sludge Utopia by Catherine Fatima is an auto-fictional novel about sex, depression, family, shaky ethics, ideal forms of life, girlhood, and coaching oneself into adulthood under capitalism.

Using her compulsive reading as a lens through which to bring coherence to her life, twenty-five-year-old Catherine engages in a series of sexual relationships, thinking that desire is the key to a meaningful life. Yet, with each encounter, it becomes more and more clear: desire has no explanation; desire bears no significance.

From an intellectual relationship with a professor, a casual sexual relationship, to a serious love affair, to a string of relationships that takes Catherine from Toronto to France and Portugal and back again, Sludge Utopia presents, in highly examined, raw detail, the perspective of a young woman’s punishing though intermittently gratifying sexuality and profound internalized misogyny, which causes her to bring all of life’s events under sexuality’s prism.

Bespeak Audio Editions brings Canadian voices to the world with audiobook editions of some of the country’s greatest works of literature, performed by Canadian actors.

About the authors

Catherine Fatima is a writer who was born, raised and currently lives in Toronto. Sludge Utopia is her first book.

Catherine Fatima's profile page

Ashley Tredenick's profile page

Editorial Reviews

“Few recent novels have absorbed me so completely, and filled me with this kind of plain admiration: here is a fresh mind, a captivating voice, and analytical acuity. It leaves me feeling as though I had discovered a female, 21st century Henry Miller for all its unfiltered engagement in the raw and the real.” — Sheila Heti, author of How Should a Person Be?