A review by scribepub
Fever of Animals by Miles Allinson

It’s thrilling to read writing like this. Panels of visual perfection strung throughout give sustained lapidary brilliance … There’s a lot of learned conversation about art and art history … [and] some tender and anguished inquiries about whom we love and why … Underneath all of this is the eternal question about how to be authentically yourself in the world … [A]n extravagantly good novel. Not only does it have assurance and authority, it is made with that remarkable magical force of authenticity.
Helen Elliott, Saturday Age

A “voice-driven” narrative par excellence, at the heart of which is a sensually evoked life … Allinson's distinctive, slyly amusing voice takes us on a dizzying journey through memory, grief, and what it means to be an artist with integrity.
Jude Cook, Literary Review

[An] exceptional first novel … full of art and ideas, and yet so intimate that it feels like a conversation with a dear, intelligent friend … masterful in its treatment of time and memory, and filled with such clarifying moments of observation and insight that it is heartbreaking to reach the final page. This is an exquisite, painterly novel, and Allinson is a writer destined for a cult following.
Emily Bitto, Stella Prize-Winning Author of The Strays

As this fever-dream of a novel veers between the quotidian and the nightmarish, it asks vital and difficult questions about the role of art, politics, madness, identity and intimacy … [a] deeply impressive debut.
Veronica Sullivan, Books+Publishing, Five Stars

[A] cerebral novel, passionately invested in the intellectual and cultural value of artistic production … From Balaclava and St Kilda to London, Berlin, Venice and Bucharest, Allinson’s novel ranges far and wide, anchored by the all-encompassing interiority of its unsettled protagonist’s first person narrative … Disparate timeframes, geographically distant locations and even different textual modes are seamlessly woven together, inviting the reader to reflect on the different ways a novel can take form — and indeed, the different forms a novel can take … [Fever of Animals] moves effortlessly between the streets of Fitzroy or London and a world of haunted Romanian forests and fevered dreams.
Sophia Barnes, Sydney Review of Books

Allinson is unashamedly a serious writer, in the mould of dark luminaries like Roberto Bolaño, Thomas Bernhard, Robert Walser, and perhaps W.G. Sebald … Fever of Animals takes itself seriously, like good art should do … and it takes you seriously. All it asks is that you take it seriously back, and to do so is pleasurable and challenging and nourishingly sad.
Sam Cooney, Readings Monthly

Heartfelt, darkly comic, and nothing short of extraordinary. Allinson’s novel is a rarity — fearless, finely judged and alive with mystery.
Andrew Croome, Author of Midnight Express and Document Z

[Allinson] has a distinctive and rare authorial voice, one that is alive with wit, intelligence, and energy … An outstanding new talent.
Toni Jordan

This is the book on everyone's lips right now … Offbeat and superbly written.
Tessa Connelly, Canberra Weekly

Weird, audacious, paradoxical and strange … Fever of Animals consistently invites us to question its claims to authenticity: what exactly is the difference between great fiction and a tremendously compelling lie, a hoax? … [A] fruitful collaboration of the critic and the fiction writer … full of bizarre, uncalculatedly stunning moments … somewhere at the intersection of lying and lyric.
Joshua Barnes, The Newtown Review of Books

The play between truth and fiction, between the writing self and the self written, is one of the great pleasures of Fever of Animals … audacious, clever, and original.
Catriona Menzies-Pike, Australian Book Review

[A] moody, multilayered character study … from an author who is also an artist … Each moment of personal revelation is buttressed by beautifully crafted descriptions of art. Two pages are spent lovingly viewing a Caravaggio in a hot, hostile Naples, while Miles remains oblivious to his disintegrating world … At its best, Fever is a Nabokovian portrait of the artist as a broken man.
The Saturday Paper

Allinson’s novel has a dreamlike quality … Random memories float to the surface at unexpected moments. The narrator’s perspective seems hazy, clouded as it is by grief, longing and a gnawing personal disappointment … [The book] demonstrates a devastating knack for conveying the nuances of bereavement … [E]rudite and intriguing.
Weekend Australian

Despite the studied diffidence of much of its prose, this is a tightly wound and self-referential novel … abundant with references to literature and fine art … Allinson is especially good at the space that solitude allows for the hollow accounting of self-perception.
James Tierney, Kill Your Darlings

A fresh, innovative tale … Conundrums abound as the ambiguity of the author-like protagonist and his heartbreak intersects with the surrealist’s obscurity and unsolved disappearance.
Sunday Star Times

Allinson’s distinctive, slyly amusing voice takes us on a dizzying journey through memory, grief and what it means to be an artist with integrity.
Jude Cook, Literary Review