Brass

Brass

by HelenWalsh (Author)

Synopsis

Nineteen-year-old Millie O'Reilly is clever, spiky and adored by men - yet utterly forlorn. Increasingly disillusioned, she seeks an escape in the underbelly of Liverpool...Shockingly candid and brutally poetic, Helen Walsh has created a portrait of a city and a generation that offers a female perspective on the harsh truth of growing up in today's Britain. Brass is an unsettling but ultimately compassionate account of the possibilities of identity and the desirability of love.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 304
Edition: Main
Publisher: Canongate Books Ltd
Published: 05 May 2005

ISBN 10: 1841956554
ISBN 13: 9781841956558

Media Reviews
If you want to find a new sense of what it is like to be a woman in England today, Brass is the most striking coming-of-age story that I have read for a long time... Helen Walsh is up there with Irvine Welsh in her ability to show what it is that draws people to the extremes of pleasure. Vogue; In Brass, Walsh has created some of literature's sexiest sex scenes, most out-of-it drug-taking and a dark, cynical worldview. But her ultimate offering of love and redemption is something else. Brass is a novel whose imagery you won't easily scrub off the back of your mind. It is spellbinding and utterly unique. Independent; Something of ferocious power... Helen Walsh is not going to be a major and interesting new voice; she already is one. Niall Griffiths; She will knock you sideways. Guardian; Helen Walsh's first novel, Brass, is an incredibly uplifting experience... she has this natural, easy-going courage that comes from being original without having to try. You wouldn't say the future of mainstream fiction was exactly safe in her hands, but it'll certainly be more adult, more comic, more eventful. Guardian; As raw and confrontational as a Toxteth knife fight. Kerrang! Walsh has a gift for creating character through voice... To use an image that both protagonist and author would enjoy, these are the budding breasts of a voluptuous talent. The Times; A clear-eyed, loving, pummeling classic Uncut; Tough, candid and explicit... Walsh's writing packs a real punch. Esquire; A barely restrained vernacular howl... 2004's great debut. Arena
Author Bio
Helen Walsh was born in Warrington in 1977 and moved to Barcelona at the age of sixteen. Working as a fixer in the red-light district, she saved enough money to put herself through language school. Burnt out and broke, she returned to England a year later and now works with socially excluded teenagers in North Liverpool. Brass is her first novel.