The Lodgers, which follows a woman living in a precarious sub-let as she keeps an eye on her wayward mother, has been described as a darkly comic novel [that] brings wit and invention to a story of rented rooms” by The Guardian and “pleasingly weird” by the Times Literary Supplement.
Now featured by , it’s also been widely praised by other authors. AK Blakemore has applauded the “tang and pith in every sentence” and Nathalie Olah said: “There is no one better than Holly Pester at communicating the eerie, sometimes hilarious and often hallucinatory experience of modern precarity.”
Dr Pester, whose practice-as-research drew on her research into contemporary tenancy and housing precarity, as well as her own experiences as a lodger and the child of a single mother who had lodgers in writing the book. As well as studying women’s fiction and experimental novels in preparation, she also took inspiration from her work as a successful poet.
The result has been described by The Observer as a “stylistically eccentric novel [that] holds a pressing, political truth.”