Description

Book Synopsis
'A wise, intimate tale that is by turns joyful, sorrowful and explicit' Observer 'The author delves deep into Lottie’s psyche, shying away from nothing, to create a rounded and gripping portrait of a woman on the edge of change’ Daily Mail Lottie Kristin is independent from the start. Born in the middle of the century to a middle-class family in the very middle of America, Lottie is set apart by her smarts and sensuality. A girl who'd rather carry out dissections on a snowy back porch than join her family for Christmas dinner is a strange and exotic artifact in the town of Sleeping Bay. But by her early twenties, Lottie finds herself trapped in a marriage gone stale, with a daughter she adores but whose existence jeopardizes her place in the lab and her dream of becoming a scientist. How can a young woman make her way in a world determined to contain her brilliance, her will, and her longing to live? Bravely and wisely written, Artifact is an intimate and propulsive portrait of a whole woman, a celebration of her refusal to be defined by others’ imaginations, and a meditation on the glorious chaos of biological life.

Trade Review
A wise, intimate tale that is by turns joyful, sorrowful and explicit * Observer *
Lottie … encapsulates the dichotomy of her life. She’s a smartly realised character – bright yet naïve, determined and single-minded ... Heyman handles her subject lightly, lacing it with humour * A Life in Books *
The author delves deep into Lottie’s psyche, shying away from nothing, to create a rounded and gripping portrait of a woman on the edge of change * Daily Mail *
A heroine for our times * Publishers Weekly *
Praise for Scary Old Sex: Lusty, tough and life-affirming -- Elaine Showalter * Guardian *
Hits the reader in the psyche, the gut and the groin with the force of a precision-aimed slingshot … Shocking, mesmerising and truthful -- Rowan Pelling * Sunday Telegraph *
Both funny and eye-wateringly explicit -- Joan Bakewell * Independent *
Rueful and funny and observant ... Heyman is an enlightened observer across many aspects of life ... These men and women are busily and blissfully humanizing themselves, the kind of bliss that lifts right off the page * New York Times *
A terrific story collection ... Heyman is frank in her descriptions, but never cruel or unfeeling ... a tender, perceptive work * Wall Street Journal *
So stylish, earthy and funny -- Deborah Moggach
[An] impressive collection ... Heyman takes on the brutal intimacy of death and aging and provides new ways of seeing and experiencing these stages of life * San Francisco Chronicle *
Heyman’s frank tales ... feel paradoxically taboo on the page, all the more so for their fierce candour * New Yorker *
Sensual and sometimes shocking … Heyman writes with such intimacy and precision that she frequently makes you feel like a trespasser -- Imogen Lycett-Green * Daily Mail *
Bold, hilarious and intelligent ... Heyman is upfront and her characters are richly internal * Irish Times *
Delivers a shock of taboo desire that is lusciously sensual -- Michèle Roberts * Independent *
Though her characters’ flaws, fears and phobias feel all too real, Heyman’s treatment of them is honest, human and kind * Daily Telegraph *

Artifact

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    RRP £8.99 – you save £0.45 (5%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Thu 25 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Arlene Heyman

    2 in stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Artifact by Arlene Heyman

      Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
      Publication Date: 11/11/2021
      ISBN13: 9781526619426, 978-1526619426
      ISBN10: 1526619423

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      'A wise, intimate tale that is by turns joyful, sorrowful and explicit' Observer 'The author delves deep into Lottie’s psyche, shying away from nothing, to create a rounded and gripping portrait of a woman on the edge of change’ Daily Mail Lottie Kristin is independent from the start. Born in the middle of the century to a middle-class family in the very middle of America, Lottie is set apart by her smarts and sensuality. A girl who'd rather carry out dissections on a snowy back porch than join her family for Christmas dinner is a strange and exotic artifact in the town of Sleeping Bay. But by her early twenties, Lottie finds herself trapped in a marriage gone stale, with a daughter she adores but whose existence jeopardizes her place in the lab and her dream of becoming a scientist. How can a young woman make her way in a world determined to contain her brilliance, her will, and her longing to live? Bravely and wisely written, Artifact is an intimate and propulsive portrait of a whole woman, a celebration of her refusal to be defined by others’ imaginations, and a meditation on the glorious chaos of biological life.

      Trade Review
      A wise, intimate tale that is by turns joyful, sorrowful and explicit * Observer *
      Lottie … encapsulates the dichotomy of her life. She’s a smartly realised character – bright yet naïve, determined and single-minded ... Heyman handles her subject lightly, lacing it with humour * A Life in Books *
      The author delves deep into Lottie’s psyche, shying away from nothing, to create a rounded and gripping portrait of a woman on the edge of change * Daily Mail *
      A heroine for our times * Publishers Weekly *
      Praise for Scary Old Sex: Lusty, tough and life-affirming -- Elaine Showalter * Guardian *
      Hits the reader in the psyche, the gut and the groin with the force of a precision-aimed slingshot … Shocking, mesmerising and truthful -- Rowan Pelling * Sunday Telegraph *
      Both funny and eye-wateringly explicit -- Joan Bakewell * Independent *
      Rueful and funny and observant ... Heyman is an enlightened observer across many aspects of life ... These men and women are busily and blissfully humanizing themselves, the kind of bliss that lifts right off the page * New York Times *
      A terrific story collection ... Heyman is frank in her descriptions, but never cruel or unfeeling ... a tender, perceptive work * Wall Street Journal *
      So stylish, earthy and funny -- Deborah Moggach
      [An] impressive collection ... Heyman takes on the brutal intimacy of death and aging and provides new ways of seeing and experiencing these stages of life * San Francisco Chronicle *
      Heyman’s frank tales ... feel paradoxically taboo on the page, all the more so for their fierce candour * New Yorker *
      Sensual and sometimes shocking … Heyman writes with such intimacy and precision that she frequently makes you feel like a trespasser -- Imogen Lycett-Green * Daily Mail *
      Bold, hilarious and intelligent ... Heyman is upfront and her characters are richly internal * Irish Times *
      Delivers a shock of taboo desire that is lusciously sensual -- Michèle Roberts * Independent *
      Though her characters’ flaws, fears and phobias feel all too real, Heyman’s treatment of them is honest, human and kind * Daily Telegraph *

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