@booklet {11353, title = {Blue Ticket. A Novel}, year = {2020}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Doubleday, 2020. 287 pp.

}, month = {2020}, pages = {285 pp.}, publisher = {Hamish Hamilton}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The novel is set in a future in which girls at puberty are chosen to have either marriage and motherhood or a career and independence.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author, Welsh author}, isbn = {9780241404454 978-0-38554-563-1 }, author = {Sophie Mackintosh (b. 1988)} } @booklet {11033, title = {"Placation"}, howpublished = {Gross Ideas: Tales of Tomorrow{\textquoteright}s Architecture}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {10-17}, publisher = {The Architecture Foundation and Oslo Architectural Triennale}, address = {London}, abstract = {

In the story, the Earth requires that\ it be placated annually with the body part of a human and focuses on a girl who cannot decide what part of her body to sacrifice. Compare to 1948 Jackson, \“The Lottery.\”\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Female author, Welsh author}, isbn = {978-1-9996462-3-3 }, author = {Sophie Mackintosh (b. 1988)}, editor = {Edwina Attlee and Phineas Harper and Maria Smith} } @booklet {10046, title = {The Water Cure}, year = {2018}, note = {

U. S. edition New York: Doubleday, 2018

}, month = {2018}, publisher = {Hamish Hamilton}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The novel is set in what is presented as a dystopian future in which men have supposedly become literally toxic to women, and one man isolates his family, including his three daughters, on an island. It is never made clear is the toxicity actually exists.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Female author, Welsh author}, author = {Sophie Mackintosh (b. 1988)} }