
Published June 6th, 2024 by Tinder Press
Literary Fiction, Humorous Fiction
Welcome to my review for this fierce, unflinching and mesmerising debut. Thank you to Tinder Press for the sending me a proof copy of the book in exchange for my honest review.
********
ABOUT THE BOOK:
An Observer top ten best new novelist for 2024
‘A simmering debut, heady with the possibilities of language and the righteousness of female rage’
Kiran Millwood Hargrave, author of The Mercies
‘Lush and dreamlike – a sweltering novel, where the sunlight pulses with nightmarish dread’
Colin Walsh, author of Kala
‘A modern-day Dionysian cult of women in the woods – haunting and exhilarating’
Jennifer Saint, author of Ariadne
‘Emma Cline’s The Girls meets Lord of the Flies . . . compelling, cultish and utterly feral’
Alice Slater, author of Death of a Bookseller
______
They thought they knew everything about us. The kind of women we were.
It was a place for women. A remote farm tucked away in the Kent Downs. A safe space.
When Iris – newly single and living at home with her mother – meets the mysterious and beguiling Hazel, who lives in a women’s commune, she finds herself drawn into the possibility of a new start away from the world of men who have only let her down. Here, at Breach House, the women can be loud and dirty, live and eat abundantly, all while under the leadership of their gargantuan matriarch, Blythe.
But even among the women, there are power struggles, cruelty and transgressions that threaten their precarious way of life. When a group of men arrives on the farm, the commune’s existence is thrown into question, hurtling Iris and the other women towards an act of devastating violence.
Fierce and unapologetic, Spoilt Creatures is an intoxicating debut about transgression, sisterhood and the seductive nature of obsession. It pulls back the skin of patriarchal violence and examines the female rage that lurks beneath.
********
MY REVIEW:
“We cannot get the outside world in. Women are treated like dogs in the outside world. Like we’re a different species altogether, something dangerous…But here, here we can control our circumstances, live without that kind of judgement. I know it’s not perfect… But it’s ours. It’s worth preserving.”
Dreamlike, mesmerising, sultry, ferocious and unsettling, Spoilt Creatures is a breathtaking debut. Amy Twigg was named an Observer top ten new novelist for 2024, and from the opening lines of this beautifully written, evocative and bold story, it is easy to see why. This is a story of patriarchal violence, female rage, self-discovery, and the desire to fit in. Where the brutal, fierce and untamed violence lived alongside an idyllic peacefulness and calm. It is a heady and intoxicating mix, and I was enrapt, trying to savour every word as it soaked into my soul.
“And now I began to realise. That I had stumbled into something I didn’t quite know the shape of, had misjudged my circumstances. That I was part of something that would mark me for the rest of my life, even if no one knew who I was. That I was in trouble.”
The story is told by Iris, a thirty-something woman living back at home with her mother after her relationship ended. She’s looking for a new start when she meets Hazel, a mysterious woman who lives in an equally mysterious place called Breach House, a remote farm that is a sanctuary for women; a safe space where men are not allowed that is away from the judgement and violence of the rest of the world. Led by their matriarch, Blythe, the women all pitch in to live independently, feeling wild and untamed as they dig their bare hands in dirt to pull up roots wearing only underwear in the baking sun, dance around fires in the moonlight and swim almost naked in the river. It is a place of contrasts, feeling picturesque and idyllic but also giving eerie, cult-like vibes. There’s also a darkly voyeuristic feel, as if we’re spying on these women and seeing things that should be private and almost sacred.
“I could see now it took a certain type of woman to live at Breach House, and I wanted to believe I could be one of them, loud and strong and capable.”
The characters feel like women we might know, making it easy to relate to them and feel a part of their world. I felt a kinship with Iris that helped me to feel invested in her story. Like her my life fell apart in 2008 and I had to start again, so I could relate to how she was feeling. When you’re lost like that you’re desperate to be rescued and to find a sanctuary. While we slowly get to know Iris, Hazel remains a mystery, giving up very little information about herself while being hungry to know everything about Iris. Her personality feels like a representation of Breach House itself with all of its cryptic intrigue. But one thing we know for sure about Hazel is that she offers Iris everything she’s been searching for and there is a strong bond between them that fizzes with electricity. It felt reminiscent of the days of intense teenage friendships and crushes where people were your whole world and it would feel like the world had ended if you lost them. We know very little about the other women at Breech House, meeting them at face value like Iris does. But one things we do learn about them is that even at Breach House there are those who can be cruel and vindictive, especially when their way of life is threatened.
“People looked at the photographs and decided they knew everything about us. Believing in the oil spill of newspaper ink, how it clung to every shadow, conspiring grit and gloom.”
From the start of the book we know something violent happened at Breach House. Something that the place is now infamous for. But the mystery of what happened is revealed slowly, moving between timelines as Iris narrates events that lead up to that terrible event and the aftermath of it all as she tries to come to terms with the trauma she’s experienced. There is a dark undercurrent of dread that runs through the story and I spent the whole book trying to predict what could have happened. But when the truth was revealed I was unprepared as the rage these women had buried inside them rose to the surface, culminating in a shocking act of brutality and blood.
“But they continued to talk about us, our story passing from one mouth into another until it changed shape, was chewed into legend.“
Fierce, menacing, atmospheric and beguiling, this mesmerising debut is one of my top reads of the year. Ms. Twigg is a talent to watch and I can’t wait to see what she writes next.
Rating: ✮✮✮✮✮
********
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Amy Twigg was born and raised in Kent, where her obsession with remote landscapes and gypsy tarts began. After studying Creative Writing at university, she moved to Surrey where she works as a freelance copywriter. Her debut novel Spoilt Creatures won the BPA Pitch Prize and was longlisted for the Mslexia Novel Competition and Blue Pencil Agency First Novel Award. She is also an alumnus of the Curtis Brown Creative novel writing course. Spoilt Creatures is a lead title for Tinder Press (June 2024), and Amy was selected as an Observer Best New Novelist of the year.
********
BUY THE BOOK:
Waterstones* | Bookshop.org* | Amazon*
*These are affiliate links
********
Thanks for reading, Bibliophiles xxxx
