Happy Bad

Author: Nolan, Delaney

Publication Date:

October 2025

Pages:

304

Original language and publisher

English (USA) | Astra House

Territories Handled

World excl. North America

Genre

Literary Fiction

Happy Bad

Author: Nolan, Delaney

Synopsis

“Delaney Nolan’s breathtaking, sharply crafted debut announces the arrival of an important new writer. The characters who populate these pages are unforgettable. Happy Bad will stand the test of time, but it’s also exactly the kind of book we need in our troubled times.” —Jamel Brinkley, author of A Lucky Man and Witness

“An exhilarating, dynamic, addictive debut, Delany Nolan’s Happy Bad is a hell of a book.” —Jami Attenberg, author of A Reason to See You Again

Happy bad shows the too-near future of our nightmares: climate disastrous, opportunities few, food altered, brains manipulated. But this book also gives us the best we can dream of: people who look out for each other, communities who take care. Delaney Nolan has written a brutal, joyful, surprising, and gorgeous novel of human contradictions. It’s a stunner.” –Julia Phillips, author of Bear and Disappearing Earth

“This is a preternaturally good novel by a writer who can see the future. Not the ‘thing that will happen if we don’t change course’ but the future that has already crept up on us–the slow apocalypse, the rising water, the burned-out grid. In addition to being a pitch perfect description of the consequences of capital’s love affair with oil, Happy Bad is a riotously well-written, weirdly fun nail-biter of a story–and a poignant defense of human life, however grimy the circumstances.” –Lydia Kiesling, author of Mobility 

“What a writer Delaney Nolan is. Every sentence of Happy Bad hums electric. Nolan has written an all-too-real future, hot and drug-addled, and every page will surprise you, delight you, devastate you. It is rare to find a book at once as imaginative and true, as horrifying and hopeful, as this brilliant debut. A major talent, Nolan doesn’t shy away from America’s biggest problems; she takes them on with wit, humour, and compassion.” –Matthew Salesses, author of The Sense of Wonder

“Absolutely fantastic. Delaney Nolan’s mature, sardonic prose sets this book apart from other climate apocofiction; she nails a devil-may-care tone that perfectly accompanies a creeping, boiled frog catastrophe, the kind of “well, this may as well be happening” feeling I am also getting accustomed to in current year. Capitalism grinds on, even in the moderately far future. Also, emotionally disturbed girl children behaving badly (and finding where they belong) is one of my favorite genres.” — Zoe Snyder, The Doylestown & Lahaska Bookshop

Hernan Diaz meets Ottessa Moshfegh in this madcap road trip chronicle; a moving display of human connection in the face of violence and climate destruction from a remarkable new voice in fiction.

Beatrice works at Twin Bridge, a chronically underfunded residential treatment center in near-future East Texas, teeming with enraged teenage girls on either too many or not enough drugs. On a normal day, it’s difficult for Beatrice and the other staff—Arda, Carmen, and Linda—to keep their cool. Now, she’s in charge of overseeing the drug trial being conducted there: most of the girls are on heavy doses of BeZen, which produces wonderfully calming effects on (almost) everybody, except her most difficult charge, Teresa. If the trial goes well, the pharmaceutical company will pay for a swanky new facility far away from dust-blown Askewn. No stranger to the power of a well-placed lie, Beatrice just needs to fudge a few numbers on her BeZen report and all of Twin Bridge will get their ticket out of Texas. Then the lights go out.

A heat wave triggers a massive, sustained blackout. In the ensuing chaos and dust storm, a heavily medicated Teresa commits a shocking act of violence. Beatrice keeps this secret as the staff and residents leave town in a stolen van, hoping to reach the new facility in Atlanta. Meanwhile, Beatrice’s thoughts spiral deeper into the chain of events that drove her from Carolina when she herself was a teen: how her parents joined a bizarre new religion, and how their house burned down under mysterious circumstances. Now, facing police brutality, sweltering heat, panicked evacuees, the girls’ mounting withdrawal, and the consequences of her lies, Beatrice, her colleagues, and the strange but handsome handyman Frank must keep the group safe while searching for a route out of the blackout zone. Met with state violence as they try to cross a bridge to Mississippi, the group reroutes to the now-flooded bayous of southern Louisiana, where in the region’s neglected margins they find a refuge and the possibility of hope.

Marketing Information

  • Author wrote about the elimination of federal climate tools for The Guardian, February 24, 2025
  • Author wrote about clean air legislation in Louisiana for Sierra, published June 8, 2025