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Brat

3.8(55)
Hardcover€27.50Paperback€16.50
Language
English
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About the book

"Brat is a raucous story of the messy, messed-up business of living, dying and having a family." --Financial Times

"The novel crackles with gothic horror, deadpan humor, and a damning sense of alienation that you won't soon shake." --Chicago Review of Books

From a provocative literary talent, a hilarious and haunted novel grappling with grief, inheritance, and the ghosts of his past

We meet our ill-tempered protagonist--the titular "brat"--at a low moment, but not yet at rock bottom. Gabriel is mourning the death of his father as well as a recent breakup and struggling to finish writing his second book. Alone and aimless, he agrees to move back into his parents' house to clear it out for sale.

In fragments and figments, Gabriel takes us on a surreal journey into the mysteries of the family home, where he finds unfinished manuscripts written by his parents that seem to mutate every time he picks them up and a bizarre home video that hints at long-buried secrets. Strange people and figures emerge--perhaps directly from the novel's embedded fictions--but despite his compromised state, Gabriel is determined to try to make sense of these hauntings. Part ghost story, part grief story, flirting with the auto-fictional mode while sitting squarely in the tradition of the gothic, Brat crackles with dead-pan humor and delightfully taut prose, heralding the next generation of fiction--formally inventive, influenced by the rhythms of the internet, and infused with a particularly Gen Z sense of alienation.

Editions (5)

ISBN9780593656877
PublisherPenguin Publishing Group
Publication Date06/04/24
Pages320

Reviews & Ratings

55 ratings

15 reviews

3.8

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  • lui26.9
    lui26.9

    782 Followers

    3.0

    Zwischen Wahrheit und Halluzinationen

    Brat: A Ghost Story ist ein atmosphärischer Mix aus Horror und Autofiktion. Das Haus, in dem der Protagonist nach dem Tod seines Vaters landet, ist voller unheimlicher Erinnerungen und seltsamer Veränderungen – eine interessante Idee, die viel Potenzial hat. Die Stimmung ist oft beklemmend und sprachlich gut eingefangen. Allerdings zieht sich die Handlung stellenweise und bleibt manchmal zu vage, sodass Spannung verloren geht. Insgesamt ein ungewöhnliches, aber nicht immer fesselndes Leseerlebnis.

    Sep 20, 2025

  • annxchrstn
    annxchrstn

    38 Followers

    5.0

    Was habe ich da gelesen?

    Gabriel Smith hat mit Brat eine lustigen, verstörenden Horror geschrieben. Die ersten paar Seiten haben schon verrückt angefangen, denn sie beginnen damit, das Gabriel (so heißt tatsächlich auch der Protagonist) seine Haut verliert. Und so geht die Geschichte dann auch weiter. Ich hatte sehr viel Spaß beim lesen, war öfters verstört und konnte nicht glauben, was auf dem Papier stand. An leichte Seelen würde ich das Buch nicht empfehlen, da es auch viel mit Body Horror, Depressionen, Drogen- und Alkoholkonsum zu tun hat, bzw diese Themen behandelt, der Autor warnt allerdings nicht wirklich davor. Ich persönlich habe es geliebt und in kurzer Zeit verschlungen!

    Feb 9, 2026

  • lenaslibrary
    lenaslibrary

    22 Followers

    4.5

    It may not be a perfect novel, but it is an unforgettable one.

    Gabriel Smith’s Brat is a strange, unsettling debut that drifts between ghost story, autofiction, and surreal horror. The narrator, also named Gabriel, returns to his childhood home after his father’s death, intending to sort through the house and prepare it for sale. What follows is less a straightforward plot than a fever dream of grief, memory, and decay. Manuscripts seem to shift, home videos reveal unfamiliar figures, and Gabriel himself begins to peel away in translucent sheets of skin, as if his body were mirroring his disintegration. What makes Brat remarkable is its atmosphere. The house feels like a living, breathing entity - oppressive, haunted, and brimming with unresolved history. Smith writes in short, fragmented vignettes that mirror the narrator’s fractured state of mind, creating a rhythm that is at once hypnotic and unnerving. The recursive stories within stories - drafts, notes, and ghostly echoes of the past - add layers of unease, as if reality itself were being rewritten with every page. Beneath the strangeness, however, lies a very human core. This is a novel about grief, guilt, and the weight of family legacy. Gabriel is not an easy character to like: he is self-absorbed, self-destructive, and often difficult to sympathise with. Yet his vulnerability and sense of failure feel raw and believable, and the grotesque horror elements become extensions of his inner turmoil rather than mere shocks. That said, Brat will not work for every reader. Its clipped, staccato style can feel repetitive, and the narrative often favours mood over momentum. Many of its mysteries - masked figures, ghostly children, shifting manuscripts - are left unresolved, which some will find haunting and others frustrating. Those expecting a conventional ghost story, with clear supernatural rules and tidy answers, may come away disappointed. Still, the book’s originality and ambition outweigh its flaws. By blending gothic tropes with metafiction and surreal grief, Smith has created something that resists easy categorisation. Brat is less about what happens than about how it feels: jagged, disorienting, and deeply atmospheric. It lingers like a half-remembered nightmare, unsettling in its ambiguity but moving in its emotional undercurrents. For readers willing to embrace ambiguity and discomfort, Brat offers a haunting exploration of memory, loss, and the ghosts we carry within us. It may not be a perfect novel, but it is an unforgettable one.

    It may not be a perfect novel, but it is an unforgettable one.

    Sep 28, 2025

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