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Motherland Fatherland Homelandsexuals
Motherland Fatherland Homelandsexuals
Jan 16, 2026 4:36 PM

Author:Patricia Lockwood

Motherland Fatherland Homelandsexuals

'The work of a genuine original ... surreal ... funny ... subversive' Sunday Times

What if a deer did porn? Is it legal to marry a stuffed owl exhibit? And what would Walt Whitman's tit-pics really look like?

Free-wheeling and surreal yet deadly serious, and including the viral hit 'Rape Joke' ('An oblique mini-masterpiece' - Guardian), this book shows one of our most original poets at her virtuosic best.

'Lockwood has written a book at once angrier, and more fun, more attuned to our times and more bizarre, than most poetry can ever get' Stephen Burt, The New York Times Book Review, Books of the Year

'Lockwood should enter the canon forever . . . her lines left me crying on the subway' Kat Stoeffel, The Cut

'The little hairs on my back rose often while reading Motherland Fatherland Homelandsexuals . . . That's biological praise, the most fundamental kind, impossible to fake' Dwight Garner, The New York Times

Reviews

The poems in [this] collection ... are the work of a genuine original. They are surreal, they are funny, they are subversive. They do what poetry is meant to do: they make you look at things in a different way

—— Christina Patterson , Sunday Times

Prismatically witty, sexually slippery, polymorphous, and Millennially mischievous poetry ... I can see [Lockwood] in my mind, post-religion, post-family, a savvy, wounded poet hanging over an electronic abyss ... Can poetry address the massive and systematic degradation of the mental environment? Lockwood, her personae shimmering, her linguistic sensors tingling, is one of the few poets tough enough and shrewd enough to try

—— James Parker , The Atlantic

[Lockwood] has written a book at once angrier, and more fun, more attuned to our time and more bizarre, than most poetry can ever get, a book easy to recommend for people who do not read new poetry often - as well as for people who do.

—— Stephen Burt , The New York Times Sunday Book Review

The little hairs on my back rose often while reading Motherland Fatherland Homelandsexuals ... That's biological praise, the most fundamental kind, impossible to fake.

—— Dwight Garner , The New York Times

Heroically weird

—— Eryn Loeb , Guernica

Hilarious and heartbreaking . . . Readers will fall madly in love with Simon

—— Publishers Weekly (starred review)

Books like SIMON do change people's lives

—— Waterstones Darlington Bookseller

A wonderfully charismatic story about coming-of-age and coming out

—— Bookseller

Funny, moving and emotionally wise

—— Kirkus Reviews (starred)

I think I just felt my heart explode in my chest

—— Goodreads (5 stars)

One of the most electric, authentic characters I've ever read. . . I LOVE this book. LOVE it. Five freaking stars.

—— Goodreads (5 Stars)

Steal this from your teen

—— 'O' Magazine (Oprah Winfrey)

Touching and passionate

—— Observer

She takes six characters… and plonks them in sturdy houses in Hampstead, sets the clock, and lets the story play out… Like a good piece of Bach, what unfolds has an inevitability to it but manages also to be surprising at every moment. Segal has an uncanny ability to climb into the mind of each character and show us convincingly exactly what he or she would think, say and do

—— Ysenda Maxtone Graham , Spectator

Francesca Segal’s sharply observed second novel asks what parents owe to their children, and vice versa… A great premise for a novel, and Segal handles it expertly… Everyday family interactions – the deep, primal resentments played out over a bowl of porridge, or a shopping list – are observed warmly and yet with hawk-like precision… skilfully crafted morality tale for our times

—— Ada Coghen , Literary Review

Segal excels at character minutiae, switching protagonists from page to page but still doing each one justice… By the end of the book, I felt I would recognise these people waking down Haverstock Hill, albeit that I might not want to stop for a chat… As a comedy of manners though, The Awkward Age is entertaining and intelligently written

—— Jennifer Lipman , Jewish Chronicle

Francesca Segal gets the tricky mother/teenage daughter relationship just right in her sharply observant The Awkward Age.

—— Alice O'Keeffe , The Bookseller

Segal’s writing is a joy – funny, wise, and sharply observant... Terrific

—— The Bookseller

By turns tender, brutal, mordantly funny, and heartbreaking, The Awkward Age is preternaturally knowing about fractured families, and young, middle-aged, and elder love. Every sentence is gorgeously, masterfully written. I loved it as I’ve loved no other recent novel. Francesca Segal is a major novelist

—— Peter Nichols, author of The Rocks

A beguiling story about the oceans between family members, generations, and continents and the journeys we make to reach each other on the other side

—— Ramona Ausubel, author of Sons and Daughters of Ease and Plenty and No One is Here Except All of Us

There are moments in Francesca Segal’s novel when you are so caught up in the characters that you want to shout at them as though they are your own friends… Think rows, sulks, unexpected relationships and sweet romance all dissected with an elegantly forensic precision

—— Psychologies

Terrific, sharply observed… Segal gets the precarious mother-teenage daughter relationship spot on

—— Sue Price , Saga

Segal’s is a clever, cruel, redemptive, psychologically acute novel that made this reader glad to have been at school just too early for Facebook, selfies and an “online community” baying for news of your latest boyfriend

—— Laura Freeman , Standpoint

Thoughtful and beautifully observed

—— Fanny Blake , Woman & Home

A gripping foray into second families

—— Nina Pottell , Prima

Thanks to its occasional moments of emotional veracity, The Awkward Age will be praised as a worthy successor to Segal’s debut

—— Ada Coghen , Literary Review

Francesca Segal is an accomplished writer. She neatly describes the clash of cultures between the academically rigorous education enjoyed by Nathan and Gwen’s freer, no-holds-barred comprehensive school. There is an engaging and colourful cast of characters… Segal vividly conveys the difficulties faced by imperfectly blended families

—— Vanessa Berridge , Daily Express

This is a warm, funny book dealing with a most modern matter

—— Running In Heels

A brilliant, thoroughly modern family drama from the author of The Innocents

—— Hayley Maitland , Vogue

Punchy… Segal tackles her subject with humour and intelligence and a wealth of memorable characters

—— Giulia Miller , Jewish Quarterly

Exuberant and entertaining… The rest of the narrative then considers how the competing needs and duties of its four main characters can be met, handled and resolved. It does so with brio, insight and empathy, and with carefully modulated comic energy

—— Matthew Adams , Prospect

A compelling story on the complexities that come with a very modern family that we just couldn’t put down

—— Topshop

Love, loss, new beginnings and saying goodbye, it's all in here. A moving read

—— Frankie Graddon , Pool

A terrific novel.

—— John Boyne , Irish Independent

[Segal's] descriptions are spare and unerring; everyday family interactions are observed warmly and yet with precision

—— Alice O’Keeffe , Guardian
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