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Fiction / African American & Black / Historical > LOTE

LOTE

By Shola von Reinhold


Where to buy


Publish Date

July 21, 2022

Category

Fiction / Alternative History
Fiction / LGBTQ+

Price

$21.95

What was beyond doubt by the time I got back was that a new Transfixion had arrived in the form of Hermia Druitt, the woman in this photograph. This was confirmed by the sensations: flashes from Arcadia. Moonlight, of a kind, sighed up and down the tube of my spine, but above all, that indescribable note which accompanied all my Transfixions was present: humming beneath the high fine rush-probably not dissimilar to holy rapture-was an almost violent familiarity. The feeling of not only recognising, but of having been recognised.

A new Transfixion.


Shola von Reinhold's lavish debut novel lays bare, through ornate, layered prose, the gaps and fault lines in the archive. Through obsessive research on an overlooked Black modernist poet, the narrator buckles under the vacuousness of the art world and also curates a queer historical scene, breaking it open and reveling in it. Originally published in the UK by Jacaranda as part of the Twenty in 2020 Black British writers series, LOTE won both the James Tait Black Prize and The Republic of Consciousness Prize in 2021.

ISBN: 9781777485245
Format: Paperback
Pages: 456
Publisher: Metonymy Press
Published: July 21, 2022

There's something about projects of queer biographical recovery that tend towards fixity, towards foundations, toward literal correspondences . LOTE doesn't fix, doesn't found, isn't literal. It shimmers, it slips, it extends. - Anarchist Review of Books Lote delights in satirizing contemporary arts culture and carving out a Black, queer perspective. Witty, gorgeous, and at times Gothic, it questions the lines between fantasy and obsession-and the boundaries of escapism. - NUVO von Reinhold celebrates embellishment, extravagance, and not only "feeling seen" but being placed centre stage - demanding to be perceived despite a social insistence to remain hidden. - Montreal Review of Books The novel is underpinned by a question: Why are so few queer Black British modernists documented in those flourishing interwar years? Through an impressive mix of scholarship and historical fiction, Reinhold sets out to unravel and challenge this history, prying open the ledgers to ask how and why the received archive is so overwhelmingly white. - The White Review The favored plot point of archival thievery suggests that the driving force of each recovery novel lies in a desire for the past that exceeds what is considered appropriate, professional, and even legal. For Mathilda, her Transfixions offer her a relationship with her predecessors that is more complicated than mainstream culture's fantasizing about the past. - Full Stop LOTE is a magical, revolutionary piece of writing. - Frieze