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A review by textpublishing
Loner by Georgina Young
The following book reviews have been shared by Text Publishing – publisher of Loner
'Georgina Young's fresh voice and careful writing about everyday characters made me feel instantly at home. Read Loner and feel seen, feel hope and be entertained—whatever your age. Young shines.’
Alice Bishop
‘I loved this razor-sharp, whip-smart, exquisitely funny debut.’
Nina Kenwood
‘Reading Loner was like reading about a younger me: going to art school, dating the wrong people, living in my first sharehouse, making questionable hair decisions, fallouts with friends, going to pretentious hipster cafes, getting lost in Chadstone, waiting for the delayed Pakenham-line train, experiencing my first love and heartbreak, and worrying so much about seeming cool and unbothered. Loner is a convincing snapshot of what it is like to be a young artist and not knowing what the hell you want to do with the rest of your life.’
Frances Cannon
‘Loner is a very clever, unconventional and hilarious coming-of-age story. I loved it!’
Eliza Henry-Jones
‘Georgina Young made me squirm and swoon and sigh as I fell head over heels for the exquisite paradoxes of her protagonist. Lona wonders why she can never say exactly the thing she means—lucky for us, we have Young, and she articulates all those things with smarts and humour and grace. This is a book to push into the hands of everyone you know, especially those who ever had trouble knowing themselves.’
Kate Mildenhall
‘A compassionate and clever story for dropouts and screw-ups. Georgina Young has bottled the fears and feelings of every young woman who has had to learn to stop hiding inside herself.’
Brodie Lancaster
‘A portrait of a particular state of mind at a particular time of life.’
Age
‘Wry, funny and witty…A grown-up version of Daria.’
Big Issue
‘Lona is a relatable and engaging character, socially maladroit but funny and spirited...Loner canvasses the various dramas of friendship, romance, and family with insight and wry humour.’
Australian Book Review
‘An enjoyable romp…that relishes in the complexities of interpersonal relationships.’
Farrago
‘This book has humour in unexpected places.’
3CR
‘Loner is a smart and funny novel that perfectly captures the uncertainties and awkwardness of being a young adult… Georgina Young’s protagonist, Lona, is smart-alecky, wry and ever so relatable.’
Big Issue
'Lona examines the minutiae of her life and the people in it with sharp clarity, endearing honesty, dry humour and a vivid peppering of literature and pop culture references, laying bare the contradictions of her existence...This debut novel is memorable because of the spiky, intelligent, honest, witty, exasperating and endearing voice of Lona. Cleverly written, in short sharp chapters, it captures the false bravado, the awkwardness, the misunderstandings, the inability to say how you feel: it is a snapshot of what life is like for so many late teens and 20-somethings, who are beset with anxiety, aimlessness, unable to move forward or move back. The novel leaves you wanting Lona to see, in the best possible way, that she really is on the path to become her full creative, idiosyncratic self.’
Judges’ comments, Prime Minister’s Literary Awards 2021 (shortlisted)
'Georgina Young's fresh voice and careful writing about everyday characters made me feel instantly at home. Read Loner and feel seen, feel hope and be entertained—whatever your age. Young shines.’
Alice Bishop
‘I loved this razor-sharp, whip-smart, exquisitely funny debut.’
Nina Kenwood
‘Reading Loner was like reading about a younger me: going to art school, dating the wrong people, living in my first sharehouse, making questionable hair decisions, fallouts with friends, going to pretentious hipster cafes, getting lost in Chadstone, waiting for the delayed Pakenham-line train, experiencing my first love and heartbreak, and worrying so much about seeming cool and unbothered. Loner is a convincing snapshot of what it is like to be a young artist and not knowing what the hell you want to do with the rest of your life.’
Frances Cannon
‘Loner is a very clever, unconventional and hilarious coming-of-age story. I loved it!’
Eliza Henry-Jones
‘Georgina Young made me squirm and swoon and sigh as I fell head over heels for the exquisite paradoxes of her protagonist. Lona wonders why she can never say exactly the thing she means—lucky for us, we have Young, and she articulates all those things with smarts and humour and grace. This is a book to push into the hands of everyone you know, especially those who ever had trouble knowing themselves.’
Kate Mildenhall
‘A compassionate and clever story for dropouts and screw-ups. Georgina Young has bottled the fears and feelings of every young woman who has had to learn to stop hiding inside herself.’
Brodie Lancaster
‘A portrait of a particular state of mind at a particular time of life.’
Age
‘Wry, funny and witty…A grown-up version of Daria.’
Big Issue
‘Lona is a relatable and engaging character, socially maladroit but funny and spirited...Loner canvasses the various dramas of friendship, romance, and family with insight and wry humour.’
Australian Book Review
‘An enjoyable romp…that relishes in the complexities of interpersonal relationships.’
Farrago
‘This book has humour in unexpected places.’
3CR
‘Loner is a smart and funny novel that perfectly captures the uncertainties and awkwardness of being a young adult… Georgina Young’s protagonist, Lona, is smart-alecky, wry and ever so relatable.’
Big Issue
'Lona examines the minutiae of her life and the people in it with sharp clarity, endearing honesty, dry humour and a vivid peppering of literature and pop culture references, laying bare the contradictions of her existence...This debut novel is memorable because of the spiky, intelligent, honest, witty, exasperating and endearing voice of Lona. Cleverly written, in short sharp chapters, it captures the false bravado, the awkwardness, the misunderstandings, the inability to say how you feel: it is a snapshot of what life is like for so many late teens and 20-somethings, who are beset with anxiety, aimlessness, unable to move forward or move back. The novel leaves you wanting Lona to see, in the best possible way, that she really is on the path to become her full creative, idiosyncratic self.’
Judges’ comments, Prime Minister’s Literary Awards 2021 (shortlisted)