'A beautiful fever dream' KRISTEN ARNETT
'Highly seductive ... and fun as hell!' TONY TULATHIMUTTE
'Brittany Newell is truly one to watch' EMMA JANE UNSWORTH
'Incredible ... romantic, dangerous and sexy' KATIE BUCKLEY
A hottest book of 2025 in Sunday Times Style, Dazed and Stylist
A blazing novel following a young woman on a wild, hallucinogenic quest for love and selfhood in San Franciscoâs seedy underground.
Baby is a dancer at a strip club and at the age of 27, sheâs feeling lost. It seems that only Dino, her sweet, cross-dressing, drug-dealing ex-boyfriend can keep her afloat. So, when Dino disappears without so much as a kiss goodbye, she plunges headfirst into San Franciscoâs shady erotic underground to find him.
Baby searches through dive bars and old haunts, at the club and at the sex dungeon where she has a part-time dominatrix gig. She encounters clients like Simon, a recluse paying her for increasingly bizarre 'favours' and a philosophizing suicide fetishist named âNobodyâ, as well as co-workers like Emeline, the balletic new hire who seems to want to steal Babyâs whole identity, starting with her underwear.
Itâs not long before she starts to find cryptic notes hidden in her belongings and realises her search is attracting the wrong kind of attention. With her grip on reality loosening and the clock ticking, will Baby manage to put together the pieces and find the only man sheâs ever loved? Or might her past catch up with her first?
Manically smart, brutally funny and deeply sexy, Soft Core is a book about desire, fantasy and true love â like no other.
'For the generation whose life is an endless stream of dead-end Hinge dates' Sunday Times Style
'Funny, sexy and surprising, I loved itâ Pip Finkemeyer, author of Sad Girl Novel
'A profound look at sex work and lives unusually lived'Dazed
Brittany Newellâs debut novel Oola was published when she was 21 years old. Her work has been published in Granta, N+1, The New York Times; the first chapter of Soft Core was published as a short story called âBabyâ in N_1. In 2021, she was awarded a grant from the San Francisco Arts Commission that enabled her to write Soft Core.