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Habitat

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Habitat follows seven neighbours over the course of a surreal and life-changing week as their mid-century apartment building in Oslo begins to inexplicably break down around them. Connected by familial ties, long acquaintance, simmering feuds and longing glimpses, the residents of the building are bound to one another in more ways than they know.As each inhabitant is touched by strange and sinister phenomena, and their apartment-sized worlds begin to fray at the seams, they struggle to grasp that this is a shared crisis that cannot be borne alone.This remarkable debut novel from one of Ireland's most promising emerging talents is a startling parable of our uncertain age – a beautiful and inciteful examination of how we deal with seismic events beyond our comprehension and how we can only truly find meaning through shared understanding. Habitat is comparable to Kafka's Metamorphosis or Eugène Ionesco's Rhinoceros in how people respond to an uncanny situation.The building components give their own take on being used for the purposes of these people, their voices containing the longer perspective of materials that existed before the building, and which will survive in some form beyond its destruction.

320 pages, Paperback

Expected publication September 17, 2024

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Catriona Shine

2 books2 followers

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Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
Profile Image for An.
183 reviews5 followers
July 29, 2024
IF you want to read something very unique then go for this book
The beginning of the story was a bit confusing due to the rapid introduction of many characters. However, as the narrative progressed, their individual stories began to unfold, and it all made much more sense. The premise of the book is refreshing, and while the execution felt somewhat haphazard at times, I ultimately loved the unique concept and the eerie atmosphere; the progression felt very fitting. I would definitely be interested in reading more from the author in the future.
Thank you very much to Lilliput Press and NetGalley for the ARC!
Profile Image for Mairead Hearne (swirlandthread.com).
1,055 reviews86 followers
May 28, 2024
Habitat by Catriona Shine published March 6th with The Lilliput Press and is described as ‘a remarkable debut novel from one of Ireland’s most promising emerging talents…a startling parable of our uncertain age, as well as a beautiful and inciteful examination of how we deal with seismic events beyond our comprehension and how we can only truly find meaning through shared understanding.’

Habitat is quite unlike ANY novel I have ever read before. Disturbing, yet strangely compelling, it is a novel about an apartment complex and a number of its inhabitants who all experience the most bizarre few days, as the building slowly and inexplicable starts to disintegrate. Catriona Shine is an Irish writer who works as an architect and lives in Oslo. Bringing her own knowledge of building materials and her skill as a writer together, she has created a very unsettling and imaginative tale that really is quite frightening in our current environmental crisis.

The apartment complex consists of two blocks built in the 1950s and would have been considered very much at the forefront of design at the time. Over the years a strong community has developed among the residents, with regular AGMs held to discuss any issues, under the stewardship of the able-handed Eva. The novel begins on a Monday, with the next AGM due to take place the following Friday. Over the course of the next few days, bizarre events happen within, and surrounding, the building but each resident is quite dismissive initially deciding to postpone any discussion on the matter until the Friday meeting.

One of the residents is Sonja, an Irish freelance illustrator who has just taken her first step on the property ladder. Sonja feels a strange breeze within her apartment. On checking the windows and doors, she comes to the conclusion that this cool air is coming through her walls. She requests a survey but first checks with an insurance man, who doesn’t pay too much heed to her concerns. As the week progresses, Sonja makes a rather worrying discovery.

Sonja is only one among many residents who start to experience some strange goings-on in their apartments and soon Eva is inundated with requests and queries. As the latter part of the week approaches, the reader is taken on an extremely disconcerting journey as nature starts to send a very strong message.

Habitat is a novel driven out of concern for our planet and the damage and destruction we impose upon it daily. As an architect, Catriona Shine is all too aware of the necessity to change our building habits with the materials we use and how we interact with nature. With the intermittent perspective of the building and its various components and materials, Catriona Shine provides a frightening insight, at a local level, of what is really happening on a global level, except in Habitat, nature fights back in a sense.

Habitat is an extremely original tale and, in the same vein at Rónán Hession’s latest release, Ghost Mountain, it is a fable-like story evoking introspective thoughts, deliberately shocking the reader into looking at themselves and how they interact with the world outside their own front door. Habitat is a penetrating and striking novel, intelligent and convincing in its message, a very relevant debut that will resonate with many readers.

‘There are deep troughs in coastal woods where our skeletal grains once lay … We were poured into moulds, and we set, gripping rods of steel … We cling, but it is you who fear, who must be kept apart from members of your species who are not your family. We rest our edges on walls of bricks, transferring our load, the load of you and your possessions. You have no plan for us after this. Your thoughts will crumble with us.'
– Habitat
Profile Image for Leanne Dempsey.
64 reviews
February 19, 2024
Thanks so much to @lilliputpress for the advance copy of Habitat by catriona shine.

I liked this book, however I did find it was slow getting into it.
I did however love the different POV. How we can see what each person is thinking and witness their encounter in their apartment.
We also get to see how they see the building begin to deteriorate and how each persons experience was different.
It kept you guessing on what was going to happen next.

I did get frustrated with Gunnar as he seemed to not care about his tenants and what they were going through however many times they called him.l to complain about their apartment.

My favourite character was Teddy I thought he was just so cute and I absolutely loved his relationship with his grandfather Knut.

I felt on edge during certain parts and wanting to know what would happen next!!
Profile Image for ps.stillreading.
50 reviews2 followers
July 11, 2024
If you know me, then you should know that I love my weird little books where weird little things happen. Habitat by Catriona Shine fits the bill, and safe to say I enjoyed this book a lot. And if this short intro appeals to you, then you’d probably enjoy this book too.

Habitat is set in a mid-century apartment complex in Oslo. Most residents own their apartments and have lived there for years. Living in a small space with many people, it’s inevitable that you get to know your neighbors, albeit through a very limited perspective. Over the years, resentment and tensions build up, and it all comes to a head when strange things start happening to the building. Windows refuse to close. There are unexplained draughts. Bricks go missing. Walls seem to thin, to the point that sounds from the neighbors are amplified. The floors no longer remain solid. Things disappear and reappear in places they shouldn’t. The roof suddenly stops being a roof. And the earth reclaims the building, soil and roots taking over the lower levels. These things happen separately to different people and different apartments. And it’s just weird enough of an occurrence that they feel like they shouldn’t talk about it to anyone because it simply can’t be real.

But it is.

The book starts off slow, and we get chapters from different neighbors, giving us a glimpse into their lives, their apartments, their petty grievances, and their long-standing feuds. We also learn what home means to them.

The memorable cast of characters each had their own quirks and backstories. Eva, the very bossy and holier-than-thou head of the board of residents reminds me of someone my aunt has some ongoing beef with (a story for another time). Gunnar, the greedy nephew of a resident who is just itching to sell his aunt’s well-preserved apartment with all the original mid-century elements. Oh, he also owns a basement flat in the building and is renting it out to students. Unsurprisingly, Gunnar is a horrible landlord. And softspoken Sonja!!! With her determination to get to the bottom of things, despite not having anyone take her concerns seriously.

The writing in this book was compelling in an understated way. It’s not often that I get to indulge in being a little nosey, so this book about a bunch of neighbors dealing with a crisis scratched that itch. I loved how the absurdity and the horror slowly built up, with the characters shifting from mild curiosity to disbelief to the realization that something quite impossible and unbelievable has indeed happened. Things could have turned out better for them if only they talked to each other, and helped each other out. But despite living in a shared space, they have a surprising lack of community. They chose to put themselves first, hiding the truth so they can come out ahead in some way. Unfortunately for them, the building has other plans.

This debut novel by Catriona Shine was a joy to read, and a great book to start my July with. Thank you to NetGalley and The Lilliput Press for the eARC!
Profile Image for Katie Z.
250 reviews3 followers
July 18, 2024
Why do Irish authors hate quotation marks?!?!

Before I say anything else, thank you so much to NetGalley and Independent Publisher’s Group for providing me with an eARC of this book in exchange for an honest review!

I really wanted to enjoy this but the formatting of this book consistently took me out of it to the point of completely ruining my enjoyment. Maybe it was the way it displayed on my ereader, but it felt erratic in the way it was organized, occasionally making it difficult to follow and connect with. Aside from that, I just cannot stand it when dialogue heavy books do not use quotation marks. I’m begging people to use them, please, it doesn’t make you cool or quirky to not, it just makes it so obnoxious to read

With that being said, the plot of this book was intriguing and well executed. Seemingly using the current global climate crisis as a backdrop for inspiration, Habitat examines the lives of people within the same apartment building as they experience strange shifts and events over the course of a week. The addition of the perspective of the building itself was an interesting choice which allowed for deeper insight into the impact of environmental changes. It is unsettling at times and will provoke thoughts of how reality will proceed as climate change progresses.

The formatting of this book truly made it almost intolerable for me. I’m not sure if this was intentional, adding to the chaotic undertone of climate change, or if it was simply my device setting out to sabotage, but regardless it made me really hesitate to continue reading this. With that being said, the content itself was good, if not incredibly slow at times. This is only a debut novel from this author and I’m interested to see how her works grow as the years, this story had such an interesting premise that I’m sure so many intriguing and impactful plots are rustling around in her brain!

3.5/5
Profile Image for Liane.
97 reviews
July 28, 2024
3.5/3.75 ⭐️

Catriona Shine’s architectural nightmare sent me on a well-paced, captivating reading journey. We are witnessing a week in the life of the tenants of two apartment buildings as they notice odd happenings going on with the structural consistency of their apartments and the buildings.

The events are told in multiple POVs and we get a very extensive insight into each character’s prejudices and often unwarranted judgments of their neighbours. We meet several characters each day which are interluded with what seems like the thoughts (and warnings) from an unknown entity. (I’m making it sound much more mystical than it is!)
The story-telling is really, really good — the voices of the different characters are very distinct.

I do have to add a “however”. However, I was left somewhat dissatisfied with the where we’re leaving the tenants. We also never go too deep into the nature aspect of it all. I think the scales between human study — interpersonal relationships between neighbours — and the effect human living has on nature are heavily skewed towards the first. Until we are left with no real conclusion at the end.
Personally, I think the author could’ve pushed the architectural angle way more. She might not have wanted to do that to make the book more accessible but I think getting more into theories how some architects like to incorporate their buildings’ surroundings or draw inspiration from nature would’ve been really interesting in this context. But that’s a personal preference bc I’m a big old nerd.

This is definitely a book where you can draw your own conclusions at the end but I wished we would’ve been nudged into a direction a bit more forcefully. That’s another personal preference. 😇

As I said, overall this is a well-paced, well-told character study which I had a hella good time with. Would I be reading another novel by this author? For sure! I genuinely enjoyed the story-telling and the characters were just so well fleshed out.
Profile Image for Mandy.
3,395 reviews306 followers
August 27, 2024
Original, unsettling and increasingly disturbing, this unusual novel from Catriona Shine is intriguing and thought-provoking. It follows the inhabitants of an apartment block in Oslo as strange things start to happen. At first it’s just an occasional missing item but as time goes on the events become more and more alarming and simply inexplicable, try as the inhabitants might to explain them away. They turn to each other, they blame each other, they mistrust each other, but never quite manage to come together to talk openly to deal with the situation as a group. Everything becomes increasingly surreal and strange as the building quite literally starts to disintegrate around them. Is there a message here? Is it a fable of some kind? I was never quite sure if the author is making a point or simply telling a weird tale. And it doesn’t really matter as each reader can take what he or she wants from the book. Certainly it’s tempting to see the disintegration of the building as a metaphor for our disintegrating world, for nature reclaiming its own. This is borne out by the short passages that interrupt the narrative told by the components of the building. If anything, I found the latter part of the novel dragged a little as more and more bizarre things happen and it all becomes a bit repetitive. But overall I enjoyed it and felt compelled to find out how it was all going to pan out.
Profile Image for Clair.
315 reviews
August 14, 2024
I found this one to be fairly tough to get through, unfortunately.

I enjoy a cool, edgy concept. The setting? I mean, come on! A housing complex essentially collapsing onto itself for no apparent reason while all of its residents are in complete denial and only want to blame each other in increasingly hostile and absurd ways, highlighting perfectly the human condition and modern life? We have a ceiling that things fall through. Bricks just straight up disappearing in exterior walls. Animal feces and furniture sinking through floors and dirt driving itself up and through the floor. There's a lot happening in a week.

I enjoy a cool, edgy concept but I think this is a bit too niche for me to really settle in and get engrossed in the story. The writing kind of got in its own way to a certain extent, but the descriptions were absolutely vivid and rich. This might be one that after a period of reflection, I could like even more because even as I write this review I feel it growing on me (pun intended).

I received an e-arc from Netgalley and the publisher in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Melissa.
75 reviews2 followers
August 26, 2024
4.5 stars rounded down

Habitat is a strange and surreal story about several neighbors in two apartment buildings who begin to deal with troubling things in their homes. For instance, one family finds that their roof becomes porous while another finds their floor no longer holds their items up. People’s belongings go missing and even bricks from walls begin to disappear as the buildings deteriorate. Each neighbor deals with the changes in their own way and we follow as they cope and process their new situations.

I picked up this work on a whim because I was drawn into the concept and it did not disappoint! This was such a unique read and I thought the author did a superb job getting each character’s own voice shining through their chapters. POVs are switched often but I did not find it confusing. I do wish the ending was a bit more satisfying, but had a great time overall following these inhabitants.

I would definitely pick up more by this author. Her writing style was beautiful and engaging.

Thank you to NetGalley, Independent Publishers Group, and The Lilliput Press for access to this eARC in exchange for an honest review!
Profile Image for malena.
33 reviews1 follower
March 25, 2024
3.75 stars. this was interesting. although I have to admit that the second third of the book was kind of a drag, it didn’t do much. Still I enjoyed reading this. It’s a great analogy how we all live in a dying world, but we’re too occupied with our own position and issues to realize that we’re in this together. I liked the different perspectives; first it was difficult to connect to the older characters, but their inside world was well written and conveyed. Impressive that this was a debut, looking forward to future projects!
49 reviews2 followers
July 15, 2024
A really clever and thought provoking concept for a novel but ultimately I didn’t connect with the characters or the story in the way I had hoped at the outset. That said, it will be interesting to see what this very talented author comes up with next.
3 reviews1 follower
August 31, 2024
I enjoyed the concept. Was not into the execution.
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews

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