Ruins, Child

Giada Scodellaro

£12.99

The winner of the 2024 Novel Prize,  Ruins, Child  uses the lens of urban infrastructure, social commentary, folklore, choreography and collective listening to create an ethnography of place and an ode to communal ruins.

Peek Inside

In stock

Publish Date: 26/03/2026

Description

Set in what may be the future, and centred on six women sharing a space in some sort of crumbling apartment tower,  Ruins, Child  is remarkable for its irresistible sweep, wit, and prickly splintered truth. Giada Scodellaro’s novel is like a precious old mirror: dropped, looking up at you, flashing light and bits of the undeniable. With the pulsating sway of its liquid mosaic narrative, the novel may recall Virginia Woolf’s  The Waves, but is entirely its own animal: kaleidoscopic, pointedly disorienting in its looseness, and powered along by snatches of speech from its compelling ensemble cast, often vernacular, often overheard. It’s a book seemingly drawn from deep wells of Black American reality: Scodellaro’s female protagonists push back against authority in the very vivacity of their telling, setting afoot a freeing-up and a mysterious inversion of marginalization. A surreal musing,  Ruins, Child  uses the lens of urban infrastructure, social commentary, folklore, choreography and collective listening to create an ethnography of place and an ode to communal ruins.

Additional information

Dimensions 197 × 125 mm
Author

Publisher

Imprint

Cover

Paperback

Pages

104

Language

English

Edition

|Paperback original

Dewey

813.6 (edition:23)

Readership

General – Trade / Code: K