Ren lives alone on the remote frontier of a country devastated by a coup. High on the forested slopes, she survives by hunting and tradingâand forgetting. But when a young soldier comes to the mountains in search of a local myth, Ren is inexorably drawn into her impossible mission. As their lives entwine, unravel and eruptâas myths merge with realityâboth Ren and the soldier are forced to confront what they regret, what they love, and what they fear.
Robbie Arnott's stunning second novel remakes our relationship with the natural world. The Rain Heron is equal parts horror and wonder, and utterly gripping.
âWith its emotional power and rich symbolism, The Rain Heron is an immersion in landscape, climate and an animal world that lives despite us, not for us. Robbie Arnott has imagined a creature, by turns exquisitely beautiful and terrifying, the likes of which I have never seen in Australian literature. His titular heron is a source of breathless wonder, of reverence. Arnott is just as wise with his human characters, with their wretchedness and elation, love and mistrust. There are images in this book that are entirely new to me, and I will cherish them.' Jock Serong
âRobbie Arnott is singlehandedly reinventing Australian literature. The Rain Heron is a soaring feat of the imagination.' Bram Presser
âThe Rain Heron is exquisite. It is both fantastical and deeply true.' Jane Rawson
âThe Rain Heron is genuinely and completely magnificentâa magical thing.' Robert Lukins
âThe Rain Heron is an intoxicating fable from an extraordinary imagination. Robbie Arnott writes like the words want to be his.' Anna Spargo-Ryan
âRobbie Arnott imagines a thoroughly strange, inky-dark land of the near future. Sharp and original, The Rain Heron is a beautiful novel about love, violence and redemption.' Laura Elvery
âA journey into a perilous world where the horror of human greed collides with the eloquence of nature.' Leah Kaminsky
âIn The Rain Heron, Robbie Arnott has turned his gaze to civilisation's need to control and understand the natural world. This is a book full of heartâit's so richly imagined, inventive and beautifully written, with a strong message, but is never didactic.' J. P. Pomare
âDelightful. He jumps playfully between different writing styles in every chapterâŠ[An] enchanting story that also captures something very real about Tasmanian life.' Guardian on Flames
âA rich and memorable picture with prose of an exceptionally high quality.' Kill Your Darlings on Flames
âArnott skilfully switches between different voices and genres in a trick reminiscent of David Mitchell's Cloud Atlas. The range he displays is impressive, swinging from fable to gothic horror to hardboiled detective story.' Books+Publishing on Flames
âAn engrossing narrative of mystery and escape âŠYou never quite know which direction the story will take off in as it creates a new kind of fairytale for our fire-prone landscape.' Judges' report on Flames, Sydney Morning Herald Best Young Australian Novelist 2019
âA book that delivers hard truths that urgently need to be heard.' Books+Publishing
âAs luminescent as it is devastating, Arnott's tightly wrought storytelling reveals the myriad harms we wreak both on our planet and on each other. It is mesmerising.' Ruth Gilligan
Shortlisted, Guardian's Not the Booker Prize (for Flames), United Kingdom, 2019
Shortlisted, Victorian Premier's Literary Award for Fiction (for Flames), 2019
Longlisted, Indie Book Awards for Debut