Jessica Andrews writes fiction. Her debut novel, Saltwater, was published in 2019 and won the Portico Prize in 2020 and her second novel, Milk Teeth, was published in 2022. She is a Contributing Editor for ELLE magazine and she writes for the Guardian, the Independent, BBC Radio 4 and Stylist, among others. She was nominated for the ELLE List in 2020 and shortlisted for the Women's Prize for Fiction Futures in 2022. She co-runs literary and arts magazine, The Grapevine, and co-presents literary podcast, Tender Buttons. She is a Lecturer in Creative Writing at City University, London.
Jessica Andrews's first novel, Saltwater, was wonderful. The
follow-up, Milk Teeth, is even better. A story of young love and
desire that's full of the most gorgeous writing.
*Observer*
Addictive, immediate, brilliant. Jessica Andrews offers a profound
take on the ways our bodies are policed, on class, escapism and
losing yourself in others
*Helen Mort*
Milk Teeth spills over with care, truth and desire. Andrews makes
the case for a life lived abundantly and ardently, full of
sensation and pleasure, risk and safety.
*Yara Rodrigues Fowler*
Heady, sweaty, sexy, salient. I devoured it
*Abigail Tarttelin*
Like many girls from my generation, raised on a diet of Arturo
Bandini's oranges and shiny tinned dreams of post-feminism, I have
wasted too many years trying to fit into small, muted spaces. I
would rather sit down to eat and think with Jessica Andrews any
day: Milk Teeth is a novel about holding space, and the hard work
that it takes. It is true and I am so grateful it exists. What a
relief it is, finally, to step off the ledge: to choose to
adventure, to give and take care.
*Livia Franchini*
Andrews's sentences are like plum puddings. Rich. Satisfying. And
she often uses verbs - spill, split, bleed, leaks - that suggest a
messy life. Our heroine does have a messy life - don't we all - but
it's presented here in a way that sees truth pouring off every
page.
*The Crack*
In lyric dispatches, with the condensed cadences of poetry,
Andrews' novel brilliantly explores the ways we grow into and
beyond the limits of ourselves, and what happens in the gaps in
between who we are and who we're expected to be.
*Andrew McMillan*
Milk Teeth is electrifying. It's an exothermic novel that breathes,
seethes and writhes. An intimate exploration of class, precarity,
sex, power and, above all, of the fragility and exuberance of love.
The prose is vivid, gorgeous and supple. It's immediate and
ultra-sensual and has the emotional pitch and intensity of the best
gig you've ever been to. A thunderbolt of a book.
*Francesca Reece*
Jessica Andrews' arresting account of obsessive young love and
anxiety, Milk Teeth, more than fulfils the promise of her debut,
Saltwater
*Daily Mail*
As for a new book that I'm excited about, Jessica Andrews' Milk
Teeth - her follow-up to award-winning debut novel Saltwater -
would have to be it. Lyrical prose, sticky Mediterranean heat and
vivid descriptions make this coming-of-age story transporting,
sensual and completely addictive. Themes of loneliness, belonging,
identity and love - and how we're ultimately deserving of it - will
both break and warm your heart. A must for fans of Sally
Rooney.
*Net-a-Porter*
Milk Teeth examines what it means to allow ourselves to live.
*SheerLuxe*
Across its blissfully sprawling passages detailing scenes from
different cities, what anchors the novel is its exploration of how
hunger, class, desire and gender are interlaced . . . In Saltwater
Andrews sought a voice that is her own, something she has truly
settled into in Milk Teeth. Addressed in second person to the
narrator's lover, the writing is gilded with a vulnerable
immediacy, blisteringly honest and visceral. Andrews, already
lauded, has come into her own.
*Irish Times*
There aren't many high-quality novels for adults that pay serious
attention to eating disorders . . . so it's good to find Andrews
writing with such precision . . . Andrews's writing style is
sensual . . . consuming and sexy.
*The Times*
This confidence in her material - in placing centre stage a young,
unnamed northern woman living a precarious existence but struggling
to carve out more space for herself - makes her work reminiscent of
Gwendoline Riley . . . unusually raw . . . so honest and
hopeful.
*Financial Times*
An experience akin to having the hue and saturation slider of your
mind moved to maximum . . . a brilliantly hopeful book
*Caught by the River*
Astute, gut-wrenching...For a novel that is so sharp and often
written with such linguistic utility, it isn't at all sparse.
Despite these moments in which the narration is given the control
that the narrator so desires, this novel is full. In fact,
fittingly, one might say it has real weight.
*Lunate*
A transporting, visceral second novel... a sizzling novel to read
in the heat, when you're hungry for life.
*Lucy Writers Platform*
A sensual and languid love story.
*Refinery29*
A tide of sharply sensuous detail keeps the reader riveted as the
book flows by in a series of candidly recounted episodes sustained
by voice rather than plot. Andrews takes aim at the cultural
pressures shaping unhealthy ideals of femininity without ever
seeming to preach.
*Daily Mail*
A sharp and beguiling love story . . . languid, elegantly written
and dripping with a rich emotional humidity . . . Milk Teeth is a
transporting, gorgeous novel
*Independent*
I liked it very much . . . the language, the prose, is very rich .
. . there was a melody to it, I found myself reading passages aloud
as if there was a poetry to it.
*BBC Radio 4 Front Row*
Andrews' prose is distinctly stylised. It possesses a heightened
sensuality which reflects the protagonist's aspiration to live
fiercely, "like lightning" - free of restraint . . . Milk Teeth
possesses a highly charged and often deliberately uncomfortable
intimacy.
*i*
Andrews's lyrical prose overflows with sweet metaphors and sensuous
imagery that . . . remains somehow addictive.
*New Statesman*
An intimate love story . . . Lazy comparisons to Sally Rooney don't
do Andrews' unique writing style justice. Milk Teeth is a
must-read.
*Reaction.Life*
Poignant
*Daily Mail*
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