In the Cut

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What to expect

Living alone in New York, Frannie teaches creative writing to a motley bunch of students, and secretly compiles a dictionary of street slang: virginia, n., vagina; snapper, n., vagina; brasole, n., vagina.

One evening at a bar, she stumbles upon a man, his face in shadow, a tattoo on his wrist, a woman kneeling between his legs. A week later a detective shows up at her door. The woman's body has been discovered in the park across the street.

Soon Frannie is propelled into a sexual liaison that tests the limits of her safety and desires, as she begins a terrifying descent into the dark places that reside deep within her.

Critics Review

  • A true original … Disturbingly dark, explosively violent, powerfully erotic and brilliantly written.

    Sunday Times
  • Not a word is wasted in this examination of one woman’s sexual odyssey as Moore builds to a shattering climax.

    i newspaper
  • Imagine Gone Girl had it been co-written by Mary Gaitskill and Lydia Davis and you’re heading in the right direction … We need books like In the Cut now not simply because it’s a cult classic, both timeless and timely, nor even for hope in the dark, but to allow us to articulate that darkness.

    Guardian
  • In the Cut resonates anew in a culture sharply attuned to the violation of female bodies … Moore’s deadpan prose is just extraordinary… The final scene is unlike any written in a modern novel… feels newly provocative in the era of Me Too.

    Metro
  • ‘You could describe IN THE CUT as an erotic thriller, and you wouldn’t exactly be wrong, because it’s certainly that; but it’s also an uncompromising excavation of the darker reaches of female desire, and a uncomfortably heightened depiction of what it is like for a woman to feel endlessly watched and menaced by men. Its ending is also one of the most devastating things I have ever read.’

    Irish Times
  • A timely rebuke to the antiseptic quality of much of today’s crime fiction. It is a short, nasty thriller that is badly underrated

    Telegraph

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