Love & Virtue
Author | Diana Reid |
---|---|
Audio read by | Emma Leonard |
Language | English |
Subject | Sexual consent
Campus sexual assault |
Genre | Bildungsroman |
Set in | Sydney, Australia |
Publisher | Ultimo Press |
Publication date | 29 September 2021 |
Publication place | Australia |
Pages | 310 pp |
Awards | ABIA Liter. Fiction (2022)
MUD Literary Prize (2022) |
ISBN | 9781761150111 (paperback AUS 1st ed.) |
OCLC | 1257318242 |
823.92 |
Love & Virtue is a 2021 novel by the Australian author Diana Reid. Love & Virtue is Reid's debut novel and was first published by Ultimo Press on 29 September 2021. The book became a bestseller in Australia, selling over 50,000 copies in Australia since its release. It has received acclaim for its portrayal of campus sexual assault.
Plot
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Principal Characters
[edit]- Michaela Burns, a teenage university student who moves to Sydney after receiving a residential college scholarship. Michaela struggles after she can't remember the details of a night where she got blackout drunk in the first week of college.
- Eve Herbet Shaw, an outspoken, extroverted college student who publishes Michaela's story as her own experience of sexual assault. Unlike Michaela, Eve grew up in the Sydney private school scene.
- Balthazar, a jocular college boy Michaela befriends through choir practice. Referred to as "Balth" by his friends, he is long familiar with most of the residents of the college scene.
- Professor Paul Rosen, a philosophy lecturer who begins an illicit relationship with Michaela.
- Jack "Sackers" Sackville, a boisterous college student who takes pleasure in taunting his peers
- Nick, a college student who has sex with Michaela while she is extremely drunk during the first week of university.
- Emily Teo, Michaela's college friend who begins dating Nick.
Major themes
[edit]Power and Consent
[edit]Love & Virtue explores consent in both the social and sexual spheres as Michaela grapples with sexual assault and Eve's acquisition of her narrative[1]. Part of Reid's motivation for writing the story was to contrast the multifaceted morality she experienced in university philosophy with the black-and-white deployment of morality she observed in broader society.[2] Reid said she intended to use both "feminism" & "consent" to explore a "bigger theme: are you a good person, or do you just look like one?"
Elaine Channett writes that Reid utilises the story to investigate "ultimately who gets to tell a story and how; does every story need to be told? And if the story serves a greater purpose, does it matter who gets hurt, cut out or misrepresented in the process?"[3]
Friendship & Rivalry
[edit]Reid has noted her intent to explore "short-lived, far-reaching early-adult friendships", citing their appearances in other campus novels like The Secret History by Donna Tart and Brideshead Revisited by Evelyn Waugh.[4] While Michaela and Eve are initially friends, Reid says the "male-dominated academic environment" drives them apart.[2] She believes this is a natural response "to an environment where space for women feels limited. Indeed, it is a classic symptom of internalised misogyny: to perceive other women as threats."[4]
Background
[edit]Before writing Love & Virtue, Reid had largely focused on writing for student theatre.[5] After graduating from her Law degree at the University of Sydney, Reid had initially made plans to travel to the 2020 Edinburgh Festival Fringe.[6][5] However, the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in her plans being cancelled. Reid began writing the book as a project during the first pandemic lockdowns.[7]
Reid has stated that while the story is not autofiction, she allowed her university memories to texture the story.[6][8][2] Reid said:
"The settings I took from real life, like the lecture theatre, or the formal or, like a boozy Thai dinner, but all of the events in it are completely made up. Michaela, the narrator, studies philosophy and has an affair with a professor. I can confirm I did study philosophy but never had an affair with a professor."[6]
Love & Virtue is set in a fictional residential college. Reid attended a residential college for her first two years of university.[8] In recent years, University of Sydney residential colleges have received media attention for several allegations of sexual misconduct.[9][10] The 2018 Red Zone Report by End Rape on Campus Australia found "Approximately 68 college students will be raped or sexually assaulted in a university setting each week across Australia."[11]
Publication History
[edit]The book was published by Ultimo Press on 29 September 2021.[12] An audiobook, voiced by Emma Leonard, was also released by Australian audiobook publisher Wavesound on the same day.[13]
The book became a best-seller in Australia, selling over 50,000 copies since release.[14]
Reception
[edit]The book received generally positive reviews from critics. Writing for The Sydney Morning Herald, Declan Fry described the book as "a tale of our age’s crack cocaine: moral posturing", which "is a rare local example of the campus novel."[1] Zoya Patel wrote in The Guardian that the book is "nauseatingly familiar" to reporting of "the ritual hazing and sexual assault of students on uni residential campuses."[15]
Elaine Chennatt praised Reid's writing as "superb and compelling" and "walks the line of intellectual while ensuring the reader never feels isolated from the story."[3] While Juliette Marchant celebrated how Reid "toys" with genre tropes to "build up readers’ expectations, developing the archetype only to slowly dismantle it as the text unfolds."[16]
The Sydney Morning Herald named Reid one of their 2022 Best Young Australian Novelists.[17] Reid also won the 2022 MUD Literary Prize for the best debut literary novel by an Australian writer.[18]
The Australian Book Industry Awards awarded Love & Virtue their 2022 Literary Fiction Book of the Year.[19]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Fry, Declan (2021-09-24). "Is moral posturing today's crack cocaine? A new novel digs deep". Sydney Morning Herald.
- ^ a b c Ewen, Erin (2021-10-18). "In Conversation with Diana Reid: Exploring the Fragility of Friendship & Morals in her Debut Novel, 'Love & Virtue'". UTS Vertigo.
- ^ a b Channett, Elaine (2022-01-09). "Love & Virtue by Diana Reid". Aniko Press.
- ^ a b Reid, Diana (2021-09-21). "Diana Reid on female friendships and rivalry in Love & Virtue". Booktopia.
- ^ a b Kale, Neha (2021-09-24). "The new campus novel taking on toxic behaviour, drinking games and sex". Sydney Morning Herald.
- ^ a b c Farmakis, Bianca (2021). "Morality, consent and picking fact from fiction with Australian author Diana Reid". Honey. Nine.com.au.
- ^ Ayoub, Sarah (2022-10-06). "Diana Reid on Sally Rooney, Love & Virtue and her fast follow-up: 'Lockdown gave me freedom to fail'". The Guardian.
- ^ a b Droga, Lucia. "Interview with Diana Reid (Love & Virtue)". Demure.
- ^ Patty, Anna (2020-05-18). "New allegations of student misconduct at University of Sydney college". Sydney Morning Herald.
- ^ Zhou, Naaman (2018-02-27). "University of Sydney says it is powerless to stop violent hazing of students". The Guardian.z
- ^ Funnell, Nina; Hush, Anna (2018-02-28). THE RED ZONE REPORT (Report). End Rape on Campus (EROC) Australia.
- ^ "Love & Virtue". Harry Hartog.
- ^ "Love & Virtue". RBmedia.
- ^ "Diana Reid Writer - Playwright". RGM Artists.
- ^ Patel, Zoya (2021-10-22). "Love and Virtue by Diana Reid review – sex, shame and the social minefields of campus life". The Guardian.
- ^ Marchant, Juliette (2021-11-01). "Review: Love and Virtue". Honi Soit.
- ^ Moran, Robert (2022-04-29). "Sex, love and footnotes: Meet the 2022 Best Young Australian Novelists". Sydney Morning Herald.
- ^ "'Love & Virtue' wins 2022 MUD Literary Prize". Books + Publishing. 2022-02-25.
- ^ "2022 Winners". Australian Book Industry Awards. 2022.