- Steve Toltz's first novel, A Fraction of the Whole, was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize and his second novel, Quicksand, won the 2017 Russell Prize for humour.
- His new novel, A Rising of the Lights, will blow all judging committees absolutely away if there's any justice in the world! It's brilliant on all levels. In prose that's bursting with life he's gone deep into the rather miserable life of Russell who's a total loser.
- His marriage to Alison doesn't last, his affair with a friend and teacher colleague, Edwina, is on and off then on again perhaps, and he's been fired from the two jobs he's ever had. His sister, Bonnie, is a completely unlikable, friendless nutcase and scammer, so obviously they don't get on. His parents split when Russell and Bonnie were young kids. On the roll of dice his mother took him and his father took Bonnie. Both dumped them a few years later.
- This is madness on steroids - shocking, crazy and comical. But at the same time a deep and thoughtful dive into what actually being human, sensitive and intelligent means. Toltz explores interiority and immerses the reader into all its dimensions.
- AI is also under the spotlight. Consciousness still dominates.
- The ending is surprising on many levels but very satisfying.
- Here are a couple of paragraphs that will give you a taste of the book's brilliance. Russell is a career counsellor at Edwina's private school and he's addressing the parents:
'Let me offer you a deeper insight into your children and the lives they’re hiding even from themselves. When I first arrived, I saw your kids as emotionally dysregulated, insecure shit-talkers, chronically stressed, disconnected perfectionists, spoiled, coddled, overpraised budding pansexuals curating their litany of psychosomatic mental illness self-diagnoses, the girls floaty bundles of mimetic desire and mysterious endocrine dysfunction, and the boys neurodivergent maladaptive daydreamers setting the mould for at least three decades of chronic loneliness and Peter Panning it.

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