“Intense and high voltage. Readers will . . . be touched by Lily’s friendship with Mel.” —Christine Jacques, Rocky Mountain News
“[A] fizzing first novel . . . Until now, the points of view of people with disabilities have perhaps been under-documented, and certainly under-published. Yet these protagonists make perfect narrators. They have a natural private universe into which the reader is immediately drawn, and which often provides a provocatively original take on our lives. It’s a universe in which—unlike tales told by omniscient storytellers with little to bother them—nothing can be taken for granted.” —Frances Osborne, Vogue (UK)
“A vividly portrayed, most unconventional protagonist dominates this punchy first novel. . . . Lily’s voice is impressive—raw, angry, emotionally urgent, rising frequently to inchoate poetry. . . . [A] daring tightrope-walk of a novel.” —Kirkus Reviews
“[A] startling debut . . . Robinson expertly captures the dislocation of day-to-day life for someone in thrall to a debilitating and seemingly random condition . . . The result is a novel of illness and involuntarily altered states that presents reality as something unpleasant and tentative . . . Robinson’s prose is taut, and Lily is an unnervingly frank and honest narrator. Not only that, she’s great company . . . an impressive achievement.” —Time Out London
“Electricity is a gritty tour of both London and the wrecked neurological pathways of epileptic Lily O’Connor. With equal parts hip misanthropy and sweet, clean-hearted sentiment, Ray Robinson convincingly channels the voice of a woman at war with the material world, for whom language itself arrives as a jarring shock to the brain.” —Jonathan Raymond, author of The Half-Life
“Ray Robinson’s Lily is an extraordinary character and his handling of her epilepsy is equally remarkable.” —Daily Express
“Lily O’Connor is one of the most convincingly alluring characters in contemporary fiction. Robinson tells her harrowing story through a highly-charged vernacular that crackles with a skewed and peculiar poetry. Electricity is an extraordinary feat of linguistic ventriloquism; touching, beautiful and compelling. I’ll never forget it.” —Niall Griffiths, author of Grits
“A thorny, uncompromising novel, with attitude. It is also, thanks to Lily O’Connor—its sharp-edged, hard-living, tough-talking narrator—mesmerizing, uplifting, and unexpectedly tender.” —Jim Crace, author of The Devil’s Larder
“As a neurologist, I was astonished by how vividly Ray Robinson portrays one woman’s struggle with epilepsy, and the way it affected her already difficult life and the perceptions of those around her. As a reader, I was deeply moved by his young heroine’s determination to live life as big as she can. This is a story of risk and redemption and is moving, disturbing, and inspirational at the same time.” —Carl W. Bazil, M.D., PH.D., New York Presbyterian Medical Center, Columbia Comprehensive Epilepsy Center
“A quest, narrated in Lily’s engagingly unsentimental voice . . . Hallucinatory flashbacks, downward-counting chapter numbering, pages of jagged typography, icons of Lily’s pills showing time passing, are used to illustrate the way Lily’s fits shape her life and perceptions. Hours and days vanish, and have to be reconstructed from the unreliable accounts of others… Electricity is a powerful, passionate, and informative book.” —Roly Allen, The Times Literary Supplement
“Fast, furious plot, kaleidoscopic imagery, blunt observations and a wry, ingenuous, hugely compassionate heroine make Electricity a breathtaking assault on the senses.” —Catherine Taylor, The Guardian