Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

Bon and Lesley

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

When a spreading fire in the mountains stops his train just outside an almost abandoned town, Bon looks out the window and does what he's always imagined he might he steps out of his life without looking back. There, he falls into the company of two young brothers, Steven and Jack Grady, both drawn like moths to the chaos of the coming days, and Lesley, an enigmatic fellow escapee from the city. Together they coalesce into a makeshift family unit, fuelled by cheap liquor and fried food, and bound by a deep and incomprehensible love. Taking in a world of peculiar anarchies and regulations, of secret roads and portals that lurk beneath the country's failing design, Bon and Lesley is an urgent, surreal dispatch from a country intimately familiar with catastrophe.

Praise for The Town:

'Prescott seeks the universal in a meticulous paraphrase of the here and now, and finds the dislocation hiding in locality to show us just how lost we really may be.' Jonathan Lethem

'There's a deceptive lightness to Prescott's style, so this is a book that creeps up on the reader: all of a sudden you're swept away by, even bound to, this thing that's so mournful, intense and unsettling. It will stay with me.' Lisa McInerney

'A bizarre novel a seance for Kafka, Walser and Calvino. Shaun Prescott has written an ominous work of absurdity.' Catherine Lacey

  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Books+Publishing

      June 28, 2022
      Shaun Prescott continues his existential explorations of modern life in his second novel, which follows his 2017 debut The Town. In the opening pages of Bon and Lesley we meet Bon, a disillusioned white-collar worker who spends three hours commuting via train—the highlight of his day—from his home in the city to the regions out west. One day Bon steps off the train in the desolate mountain town of Newnes, where he wanders into the plaza and meets a peculiar local, Steven. Bon fails to return to the train station and home to the city. Instead, he bunks with Steven, and the two spend their days drinking beers, flicking through supermarket catalogues and looking for hidden paths in the nearby forest as they wait for the arrival of Steven’s brother Jack. After Jack's arrival, the trio are joined by Lesley, another lost soul who arrives fresh off the train, and the strangers come to settle into their respective roles of mother, father and children in a makeshift family unit. The four of them forge a banal daily routine as strange things happen around them, including the ominous appearance of the so-called Colossal Man. Filled with philosophical conversations and reflections, every phrase in this novel feels freighted with meaning; each character, vacillating between boredom and agitation, is well drawn and compelling. While Bon and Lesley has much in common with The Town, Prescott extends its bleak outlook with a consideration of care, family and what our obligations to our children are as society begins to break down. Empty streets, highway petrol stations and deserted shopping centres complement surreal scenes of suffocating darkness, hulking monsters and mysterious tunnels, making for a disarming yet beautiful and profound novel that locates itself in the tradition of speculative, postmodern writers from Kobo Abe to László Krasznahorkai, with a distinctly Australian sensibility recalling Gerald Murnane and Wayne Macauley. Kelsey Oldham is the editor of Books+Publishing.

Formats

  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

subjects

Languages

  • English

Loading