Description

This captivating literary debut and an epic love story for our times takes place over seven days as a woman wrestles with a marriage proposal and what it means for her personal and creative freedom.

She’s a waitress. He’s a chef. They used to be best friends, but now, they’re in love. She’s also a selkie, a siren, Odysseus, Persephone, Helen of Troy, a Tudor queen, and a cowgirl called Quick Fingers. He’s a really good man.

When he asks her to marry him, Hero panics. She may be a lot of things but the one thing she doesn’t want to be is anybody’s wife. He gives her one week to decide, so to gather her thoughts, she begins to write him a letter. It is both the story of how they fell in love, and of who she is, and why marriage fills her with equal parts delight and terror.

Drawing on a rich history of myth and legend, and yet unmistakably of the moment, Hero is a love story about what it means for women to be supporting characters in a world written by men. How can you be yourself when you are a product of other people’s imaginations? How can you love another person and be free?

About the author(s)

Katie Buckley was born in Cornwall and spent her childhood in Canada and the UK. She now lives in London. She was a London Library Emerging Writer 2021–2022. Hero is her first novel.

Reviews

“Fierce and thrillingly subversive.”Financial Times

"Katie’s Buckley’s assured debut novel examines female agency and how women are shaped by myths and the expectations of a patriarchal society … a fearless interrogation of female desire, anger and loneliness."—The Guardian

"The novel explores themes of gender, desire, freedom, and the constraints imposed by traditional narratives. Buckley plays with myth and truth to great effect, the prose is taut, the characters authentic." —Glamour
 

"This bold, clever novel sharply dissects gender, power, desire, and control. Tender and acerbic, Hero recognises the sacrifices women must make to be the authors of our own narratives. Buckley unsettles the reader’s gaze in her excavation of myth-making, asking how we might construct our own legends from the wreckage of our patriarchal history." —Jessica Andrews, author of Saltwater and Milk Teeth

 

"A lyrical exploration of the love we deserve but rarely receive. Buckley's writing is alchemical, transforming myth into truth and pain into hope." —Amy Twigg, an Observer top ten best new novelist for 2024 and author of Spoilt Creatures

"This book is everything. Intimate, tender and radiant, Hero is an unmissable, immaculate tapestry that fiercely imagines the stories we tell ourselves and the stories that make us." —Lucy Rose, author of The Lamb

 

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