“Higgie’s prose is fragmentary yet lucid, and the novel evokes the inextricable beauty and terror of Dadd’s sensory journey, while raising some of the philosophical questions it poses about art, language and other minds. Bedlam is a mystery story in which we search for clues as to how an individual might go from precocious talent to parricide.”
—TLS
“Higgie returns with a poetic novel that tenderly embodies the voice of Victorian-era painter Richard Dadd, who is now remembered primarily for the tragic details of his life and institutionalization. Higgie threads the needle of his complex legacy with the compassion so often denied to historical figures whose struggles with mental health were criminalized and reduced to “lunacy.” The “art novel” genre is undoubtedly making the rounds in publishing right now, but by bringing Dadd’s interiority back to life, this one promises to challenge and move us in equal measure.”
—Hyperallergic, 12 Art Books to Kick Off Summer
“Higgie captivates in this poetic story of English artist Richard Dadd and his descent into madness…An arresting meditation on the fragility of sanity.”
—Publishers Weekly, starred review
“Higgie’s sumptuous biographical novel covers the time that English artist Richard Dadd spent confined in a sanatorium…a haunting literary novel about a painter’s mental decline.”
—Foreword Reviews
“The Other Side lit up my brain. A radical, fascinating exploration of art and the otherworldly, Higgie is an expert and erudite guide in this brilliant reclamation of female artists.”
—Katy Hessel, author of The Story of Art Without Men
“Higgie chronicles with an illuminance that welds her readers to the page”
—Katie Ebbitt, The Violet Book
“Elegantly expanded my thinking on the eternal mystery of where art comes from.”
—Sinéad Gleeson
“To render another’s inner life this vibrantly is a remarkable feat. To render the raw, tangled, fierce inner life of painter Richard Dadd with such stunning immediacy and imagination is a feat of brilliance. Utterly absorbing and entrancing, Bedlam reads as one long prose poem that ushers you into landscapes real and imagined, with all the senses ablaze.”
—Chloe Aridjis, author of The Shadow of the Object
“Luminous and unsettling. A beautifully written meditation on that derangement of the senses that links creativity to madness, capturing all of the associated danger and excitement. Higgie writes like a painter, with an extraordinary attention to light and an intimate understanding of how worlds can be constructed (and torn apart) with the barest of gestures.”
—Ben Eastham, author of The Imaginary Museum