EBOOK
Pages
256
Year
2025
Language
English

About

A spring day in a gentrifying neighbourhood begins unremarkably enough; by evening someone has died.
Nat, a middle-aged queer mother of two, feigns normalcy as she worries about her taciturn, loner son locked in his room. Her friend Maddy, a failed actress and fellow parent, frets over her missed opportunities and considers leaving her marriage. Next door, Ilya, a young construction worker, struggles to renovate a fixer-upper, but a buried stream threatens to flood the basement. An old woman eyes the street through the gap in her curtains. A lonely man wanders.
As the troubled residents stumble through their errands, navigating the thorniness of class and privilege, of queer respectability and friendship in an overstretched city, each seemingly inconsequential exchange tightens in around the neighbourhood, until finally tragedy strikes, leaving it forever changed.
One of Quill and Quire's Books of the Year


Selected for The Booksellers' List inaugural Fall 2025 edition
"Though Cayley's oeuvre is relatively small (two short-story collections, three poetry collections and plays), it has packed a big punch in the prizes department, having won the Trillium Book Award, the Mitchell Prize for Poetry, the O. Henry Short Story Prize and garnered several nominations. In her first novel, the lives of residents in a gentrifying Toronto neighbourhood intersect over a single spring day before culminating in a death foretold." – Emily Donaldson, The Globe & Mail


"Cayley creates an environment in which everything has heightened meaning and in which no action or transgression, however small, is without potential consequence." – Emily Mernin, Literary Review of Canada
"Sentence after remarkable sentence, Cayley's portrayal of a day in a neighbourhood simultaneously dazzles and induces a deep discomfort." – Brett Josef Grubisic, Quill & Quire, ★ starred review
"A day in the life of a Rube Gold-'burb, where all actions have an equal and opposite cul-de-saction; every child a potential bad seed, every adult heading for a minor nick or major cave-in. A fun and disturbing read, strong in characters, paced with perfect momentum, and its morbid heart residing in the right place." – Ian McCord, Avid Bookshop
"Sincere, unsettling, and intimate...keenly observant of characters' inner and outer worlds, Cayley's narration expands and dissolves, elongating time and blurring subjectivity...Property shows how it is our unspoken, intrinsic understanding of debts to one another that holds us accountable." – Lillian Liao, Booklist
"Cayley masterfully renders each character's inner world, showing how their fears and prejudices are amplified by loneliness. It's an unflinching tale of a community's fragile bonds." – Publishers Weekly


"In this insistently particular and richly detailed portrait of a single street, Kate Cayley has captured the quiet dramas of our private lives, the contested spaces of our neighbourhoods, and the imperfect ways in which we try to understand one another. A wonderful and captivating novel, with a devastating shock at its heart." – Jon McGregor, author of Lean Fall Stand


"Holy crap! What a novel. It's about a day but also about deep time. About knowing your neighbours and not having the least clue about your neighbours - or, frankly, your loved ones. Keenly observed, superbly crafted, taut, surprising, unflinching, tender, sharply circumscribed and truly expansive, Property is a wonder." – Anne Fleming, Curiosities: A Novel
"Kate Cayley's Property is both minutely observed and movingly kaleidoscopic, a meditation on fate, accident, free will, and of the elusive and illusive qualities of selfhood. Its questions and hopes - layered into a single day on a single street - are a living, breathing presence." – Madeleine Thien, The Book of Records
Praise for Householders:
"Cayley writes with a passion that seems to extend that longed-for forgivenes

Related Subjects

Artists