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Shut Up You're Pretty

Shut Up You're Pretty

By Tea Mutonji
Categories: LGBTQ+, Lesbian Literature, BIPOC, Black Literature, Fiction, Women's Literature
Series: VS. Books
Paperback : 9781551527550, 176 pages, 2019
Reading guide (PDF)

Description

CANADA READS RUNNER-UP, 2024

Winner, Trillium Book Award and Edmund White Award for Debut Fiction; Finalist, Rogers Writers' Trust of Canada Fiction Prize; a Globe and Mail Best Book of the Year

In Tea Mutonji's disarming debut story collection, a woman contemplates her Congolese traditions during a family wedding, a teenage girl looks for happiness inside a pack of cigarettes, a mother reconnects with her daughter through their shared interest in fish, and a young woman decides to shave her head in the waiting room of an abortion clinic. These punchy, sharply observed stories blur the lines between longing and choosing, exploring the narrator's experience as an involuntary one. Tinged with pathos and humour, they interrogate the moments in which femininity, womanness, and identity are not only questioned but also imposed.

Shut Up You're Pretty is the first book to be published under the imprint VS. Books, a series of books curated and edited by writer-musician Vivek Shraya featuring work by new and emerging Indigenous or Black writers, or writers of colour.

Awards

  • Short-listed, Rogers Writers' Trust of Canada Fiction Prize 2019
  • Winner, Edmund White Award for Debut Fiction (Publishing Triangle) 2020
  • Winner, Trillium Book Award 2020
  • Short-listed, Canada Reads 2024

Reviews

Tea Mutonji's timely, original, and absorbing stories compose a shattered and shattering bildungsroman. Her lyric, dramatically charged fragments are linked by rich and vital prose, captivating and urgent storytelling, and an eye for the strange and striking detail. Probing the mundane, the traumatic, and all the struggles in between with authenticity, intelligence, and art, Shut Up You're Pretty is a stunning debut. -Daniel Scott Tysdal, author of Predicting the Next Big Advertising Breakthrough Using a Potentially Dangerous Method

This book asks us to witness the journey of a girl into womanhood, holding in her arms the fragile understandings of femininity as a commodity, femininity as a caretaker, femininity as a storyteller. Dulled by the residue of trauma and sharpened by the expectations of the streets, Tea's characters are painfully and beautifully rendered in these gritty, must-read stories. -Catherine Hernandez, author of Scarborough

A sense of assuredness permeates Mutonji's writing in Shut Up You're Pretty. Through a series of 18 strikingly raw vignettes, Loli's identity flows like the Congolese river she is named after. -Toronto Star

The stories are vivid and unsettling in their detail . .. Mutonji writes with grit and quick-witted humour. The ease with which these stories unfold is a facet of the author's craft: the prose holds its emotion in the same way the characters hold their pain. -Quill and Quire (STARRED REVIEW)

Each story is a separate, richly described glimpse into an aspect of the protagonist's life, and together they form a whole picture of a young woman who is struggling to understand herself and her world. -Book Riot

The stories are honest and vulnerable, propulsive, complex, and unafraid to show life and sexuality and family in all its messiness ... I marvelled at Mutonji's beautiful phrasing throughout, and "Sober Party" and "Theresa Is Getting Married" brought me to tears. -49th Shelf

Shut Up You're Pretty is an unforgettable collection of stories, signalling the arrival of a brave and distinctive new voice in Canadian literature. -Zoe Whittall, author of The Fake

Shut Up You're Pretty is a chronicle of millennial malaise, gendered and seaming with a discontent that does not sleep on the status quo of any page. Tea Mutonji is a writer who is assured and measured with a style all her own, holding a hand up to greats like Hurston and Kincaid. She takes back the 21st century in this delicious feast of stories as vivid and taut as they are understated. -Canisia Lubrin, author of Voodoo Hypothesis and augur