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Love & Virtue

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Love & Virtue
AuthorDiana Reid
Audio read byEmma Leonard
LanguageEnglish
SubjectSexual consent
Campus sexual assault
GenreBildungsroman
Set inSydney, Australia
PublisherUltimo Press
Publication date
29 September 2021
Publication placeAustralia
Pages310 pp
AwardsABIA Liter. Fiction (2022)
MUD Literary Prize (2022)
ISBN9781761150111
(paperback AUS 1st ed.)
OCLC1257318242
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

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  • 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

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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

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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

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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

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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

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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

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  1. ^ a b Fry, Declan (2021-09-24). "Is moral posturing today's crack cocaine? A new novel digs deep". Sydney Morning Herald.
  2. ^ 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.
  3. ^ a b Channett, Elaine (2022-01-09). "Love & Virtue by Diana Reid". Aniko Press.
  4. ^ a b Reid, Diana (2021-09-21). "Diana Reid on female friendships and rivalry in Love & Virtue". Booktopia.
  5. ^ a b Kale, Neha (2021-09-24). "The new campus novel taking on toxic behaviour, drinking games and sex". Sydney Morning Herald.
  6. ^ a b c Farmakis, Bianca (2021). "Morality, consent and picking fact from fiction with Australian author Diana Reid". Honey. Nine.com.au.
  7. ^ 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.
  8. ^ a b Droga, Lucia. "Interview with Diana Reid (Love & Virtue)". Demure.
  9. ^ Patty, Anna (2020-05-18). "New allegations of student misconduct at University of Sydney college". Sydney Morning Herald.
  10. ^ Zhou, Naaman (2018-02-27). "University of Sydney says it is powerless to stop violent hazing of students". The Guardian.z
  11. ^ Funnell, Nina; Hush, Anna (2018-02-28). THE RED ZONE REPORT (Report). End Rape on Campus (EROC) Australia.
  12. ^ "Love & Virtue". Harry Hartog.
  13. ^ "Love & Virtue". RBmedia.
  14. ^ "Diana Reid Writer - Playwright". RGM Artists.
  15. ^ Patel, Zoya (2021-10-22). "Love and Virtue by Diana Reid review – sex, shame and the social minefields of campus life". The Guardian.
  16. ^ Marchant, Juliette (2021-11-01). "Review: Love and Virtue". Honi Soit.
  17. ^ Moran, Robert (2022-04-29). "Sex, love and footnotes: Meet the 2022 Best Young Australian Novelists". Sydney Morning Herald.
  18. ^ "'Love & Virtue' wins 2022 MUD Literary Prize". Books + Publishing. 2022-02-25.
  19. ^ "2022 Winners". Australian Book Industry Awards. 2022.