"Think 'The Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man' reimagined by Kathy Acker." — The Toronto Star
Growing up in an isolated island town with her siblings and absentee artist parents, Grace has an insatiable need for attention. She looks for it first in her playmates, taking innocent games too far, and then in men, delighting in the power her body has over them, and even while she pursues solace in writing, a predatory teacher's fixation taints the one thing she loves. When she meets Jack, a young painter, she becomes muse and lover at once, and it seems she's finally found the attention she's been seeking.
Fuelled by drugs, lust, and a deep desire for connection, Grace and Jack's turbulent relationship soon turns dark, obsessive, and dangerous. While Jack's star ascends, Grace finds herself disappearing — becoming transparent like the many ghosts that appear to her. Between blackouts and binges, hallucinations and psychotic breaks, Grace begins to wonder whether anyone sees her at all.
An unflinching, unchronological coming-of-age story told through vivid and mesmerizing vignettes, Quiet Time is Grace's story of resilience, bravery, and redemption, as she fights for her voice in a world attempting to silence it. Imbued with folklore, legend, and the supernatural, Harvey's "uncannily transparent" prose (Lisa Moore) and "refreshingly urgent" voice (Joel Thomas Hynes) explores themes of growth, forgiveness, and the pains we must endure to become whole.
"Think 'The Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man' reimagined by Kathy Acker."
— The Toronto Star
"Grace relays piece by piece a full-body experience of love, sex, death, and motherhood. Quiet Time is visceral and addictive."
— Tamara Faith Berger, author of Queen Solomon and Maidenhead
"Katherine's prose is uncannily transparent and clear. The sentences are concise and yet an entire world leaps up fully formed from the first page.....The inner world of this narrator is rendered so convincingly and with such skill, I felt I knew her intimately and from the inside out. She is, by turns, sparking with wisdom and innocence, loving, and emotionally hungry, eerily vulnerable.
— Lisa Moore, award-winning author of This is How We Love and February
"This fearless and often startling book is by turns ominously funny, yet heartrending in its poetic ferocity. Katherine Alexandra Harvey has arrived. Quiet Time marks the stunning debut of an exceptional literary talent.
— Joel Thomas Hynes, Governor General's Award – winning author of We'll All Be Burnt in Our Beds Some Night
"Reading Quiet Time is like watching its narrator examine herself in a dropped mirror, the fragmented story shifting and sharp and steeped in superstition. A reflection on beauty and harm and absolution. A glittering mosaic you could cut yourself on.
— Jaime Burnet, Thomas Raddall Atlantic Fiction Award — shortlisted author of Crocuses Hatch from Snow
"There's lots of calculated prose around, creative writing tiny perfect sentences, of never-make-a-mistake virtue. Exemplary caution dead on the page. Harvey's prose is alive, clear; it is clean, and feels meant, therefore the emotion — from scene to scene — is engagingly meant, making the whole fresh, persuasive. The prose has the feel of the audacity of the real thing, not the calculated seeking-approval thing. Harvey sees for herself, and sounds herself."
— Barry Callaghan, author of All The Lonely People
"Quiet Time is a lucid and arresting novel and Grace a compelling narrator, guileless and wise and hungry. Her world, haunted by absence, silence, and superstition, is rendered so vividly in Harvey's fine, evocative prose, I was pulled in from the very first pages."
— Aimee Wall, Giller Prize — longlisted author of We, Jane
"Harvey's assaultive, angry debut acts as a splash of cold water shocking its reader out of complacency in the best possible way."
— Steven W. Beattie, The Toronto Star