Dr. Edith Vane, scholar of English literature, is contentedly ensconced
at the University of Inivea. Her dissertation on pioneer housewife
memoirist Beulah Crump-Withers is about to be published, and her job's
finally safe, if she only can fill out her AAO properly. She's a little
anxious, but a new floral blouse and her therapist's repeated assurance
that she is the architect of her own life should fix that. All should be
well, really. Except for her broken washing machine, her fickle new
girlfriend, her missing friend Coral, her backstabbing fellow
professors, a cutthroat new dean - and the fact that the sentient and
malevolent Crawley Hall has decided it wants them all out, and the hall
and its hellish hares will stop at nothing to get rid of them.
Like an unholy collision of Stoner, The Haunting of Hill House,
Charlie Brown, and Alice in Wonderland, this audacious new novel by
the Giller Prize-longlisted Suzette Mayr is a satire that takes the
hallowed halls of the campus novel in fantastical - and unsettling -
directions.
'The momentum of this novel, which I read in two delightful days, comes
from the pile-on of absurd tragedies--how could things get any worse?
Suzette Mayr taking care to immediately answer the question. And yet
it's so funny, and the energy, and the satire of campus bureaucracy is
so spot-on and delicious that I would never ever call this book that
goes down-down-down anything like a downer. I loved it.'
- Kerry Clare, Pickle Me This
Praise for Monoceros:
'Monoceros is one of the most imaginative, quirky and emotionally
devastating novels I've read in a long while.'- Globe and Mail
Suzette Mayr is the author of Venous Hum, The Widows, Moon Honey,
and Monoceros, which won the W.O. Mitchell Book Prize, the ReLit Award
for Best Novel, and was longlisted for the Scotiabank Giller Prize. Mayr
lives in Calgary, Alberta.