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Kate Briggs

    Animals Are Amazing: Bats
    Animals Are Amazing: Elephants
    Animals Are Amazing: Gorillas
    Animals Are Amazing: Dolphins
    Exercise in Pathetic Criticism
    The Long Form
    • 2023

      The Long Form

      • 448 pages
      • 16 hours of reading
      4.1(340)Add rating

      From the award-winning author of the book-length essay This Little Art, a debut novel that reaches back to the start of the novel tradition and outward to the complexities of contemporary life. Kate Brigg’s debut novel—the follow-up to her acclaimed This Little Art—is the story of a young mother, Helen, awake with her baby. Together they are moving through a morning routine that is in one sense entirely ordinary—resting, feeding, pacing. Yet in the closeness of their rented flat, such everyday acts take on epic scope, thoughts and objects made newly alive in the light of their shared attention. Then the rhythm of their morning is interrupted: a delivery person arrives with a used copy of Fielding’s The History of Tom Jones, which Helen has ordered online. She begins to read, and attention shifts. As their day unfolds, the intimate space Helen shares with her baby becomes entwined with Fielding’s novel, with other books and ideas, and with questions about class and privilege, housing and caregiving, and the support structures that underlie durational forms of codependency, both social and artistic.

      The Long Form
    • 2017

      This Little Art

      • 365 pages
      • 13 hours of reading

      Part-essay and part-memoir, 'This Little Art' is a manifesto for the practice of literary translation.

      This Little Art
    • 2015
    • 2015

      Animals Are Amazing: Elephants

      • 24 pages
      • 1 hour of reading

      A colourful, big picture introduction to some of the world's most fascinating animals.

      Animals Are Amazing: Elephants
    • 2015

      A colourful, big picture introduction to some of the world's most fascinating animals.

      Animals Are Amazing: Bats
    • 2015
    • 2014
    • 2011

      Fascismile sheet of pages 4 and 5 from "The Count of Monte Cristo'" by Alexandre Dumas, reconstructed using Roland Barthes literary technique of "pathetic criticism" literary

      Exercise in Pathetic Criticism