We pretty pieces of flesh A novel

Colwill Brown

Book - 2025

"An exuberant and ribald debut novel about three adolescent girls coming of age in a gritty post-industrial town in Yorkshire, England in the '90s who are as sweetly vulnerable and funny as they are cunning and tough "Ask anyone non-Northern, they'll only know Donny as punchline of a joke or place they changed trains once ont way to London." But it's also the home of Rach, Kel, and Shaz, bezzies since childhood. From scheming one another's first kisses, to sneaking vodka (or the occasional Cointreau) into school in water bottles, to accompanying one another to Family Planning for pregnancy tests, the girls come of age together, Donny lasses through and through. Never mind that Rach is skeptical of Shaz...9;s bolder plots; or that Shaz, who comes from a rougher end of town, feels left behind when the others begin plotting a course to uni; or that Kel sometimes feels split in two trying to keep the peace - the girls are inseparable, their friendship as indestructible as they are. But as the girls grow up and away from each other, a long-festering secret threatens to rip the trio apart. Is their shared past enough to keep them close? Written in a Yorkshire dialect that brings a place and its people magnificently to life, We Pretty Pieces of Flesh spans decades and continents as its heroines come of age, never shying from the ugly truths of girlhood. Like Trainspotting and Shuggie Bain, it tracks hard-edged lives and makes them sing, making one overlooked and forgotten place the very center of the world"--

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Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

English writer Brown wraps an indelible picture of life in South Yorkshire in the aughts around the story of three women's enduring but fraught friendship. Written in Yorkshire dialect and set in the hardscrabble city of Doncaster, the story begins with Rach and Kel's first encounter with Shaz when the three are 11. In high school, Shaz has a drunken sexual encounter with two boys, Lanky Lad and Little Un, who swear her to secrecy before she even knows whether she had given consent (much later, she realizes she had been raped). She becomes increasingly troubled over the incident, and develops an eating disorder. After a three-month stay at a rehab clinic, a rift forms between Shaz and the other two that lingers into adulthood. In the present day, when the women are in their 30s, Rach is married to Lanky Lad, Kel is in Boston dealing with a debilitating illness, and Shaz, struggling to find work in Doncaster, debates sharing her long-kept secret with Rach. The narrative is held together by vivid flashbacks to the women's younger years in the Doncaster rave scene, when they were driven by the "mad ambition to grab oblivion wi both hands and shek it loose," and Brown keenly explores the limits of the friends' early bonds. This sharp and tender novel teems with life. (Mar.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

The complicated relationship among three Doncaster lasses. Written in savory Yorkshire dialect (perfectly comprehensible to non-locals after a page or two), Brown's first novel follows the trio from age 11 in 1998, when they bond on the first day of "big school," through a fraught reunion in 2017, when a long-kept secret finally comes out. We begin with Rachael's first-person recollections of a wild night out in their teens that sketches the social and emotional currents informing their interactions. Rach's two-parent family sits at the top of the British working class, and as the girls start big school has just moved to a better neighborhood. Kel and Shaz have the "same single mums they called 'mam,' same state-sponsored quid-a-day [lunch] money, same missing dads." In Rach's view, Shaz is the tough girl who knows more and dares more, though Rach also thinks she lies about some of her escapades and isn't afraid to say so, while Kel anxiously tries to keep the peace. When the novel switches to Shaz's point of view, a second-person narration that reflects her alienated psychological state, we see that to her Rach is the solid, self-assured one clearly headed for better things. That's why Shaz can't reveal a shameful episode involving the boy Rach is dating, "cuz it's whorish behaviour, innit." In their world, girls are supposed to be sexually free but not "slags," and signals are equally mixed about rising out of the working class. Is going to "uni" and getting a decent job making something of yourself, or getting above yourself? There aren't any definite answers as Brown perceptively chronicles the shifting power dynamics of the girls' teenage years and then their separate odysseys as Rachael becomes a teacher, Kel moves to America, and Shaz sinks lower and lower with drugs, drink, and lousy jobs. A moving conclusion opens old wounds but suggests healing is possible for women who have meant so much to each other for so long. A brilliant portrait of female friendship, nearly the equal in honesty and subtlety to Elena Ferrante's Neapolitan novels. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.