Animal Stories
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Transit Books
Publishing:30th Oct '25
£12.99
This title is due to be published on 30th October, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

From a writer who has “invented a new form” (Annie Ernaux), an exploration of mortality, alienation, boredom, surveillance, and how we regard ourselves among the animals.
Animal Stories begins with Kate Zambreno’s visit to the monkey house at the Jardin des Plantes in Paris, where one stark tree “seems to be the stage design for a simian production of Waiting for Godot.” But who are the players and who is the audience, and can they recognize each other?
What follows is a series of reports from the deep strangeness of the zoo, a space that is “more often than not deeply sad, an odd choice for regular pilgrimages of fun.” Amid excursions with their young children, Zambreno turns to Garry Winogrand’s photographs and John Berger’s writings on animals, reshaping the spectator as the subject to decode our complex “zoo feelings”—what we project, and what we refuse to see. Then, in the “Kafka system” that dovetails with these zoo studies, Zambreno thinks through the notebooks and animal stories of a writer known for playing at the threshold between species, continuing their investigation into the false divide between human and animal.
Drawing on forms including reports, essays, journals, and stories, Zambreno renders visible the enclosures we construct and the ones we occupy ourselves.
Praise for Animal Stories:
"Zambreno's lucid writing and relentless inquisitiveness shine."—Publishers Weekly
"Lyrical meditations on the creative imagination and the animal in all of us...[Animal Stories] is a tour of the zoo cages of the writer’s own mind, opened for all of us to gaze on and gasp."—Kirkus Reviews
"Zambreno is one of our most inventive and formally daring writers…[Animal Stories] sees them at the height of their powers.”—The Millions
Praise for Kate Zambreno:
“Kate Zambreno has invented a new form. It is a kind of absolute present, real life captured in closeup.”—Annie Ernaux, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature
ISBN: 9798893380200
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
120 pages