A portrait of a vanishing world, and a love story for the ages - from the award-winning author of Lucky's.
In the fading glow of Australia's print journalism era, The National is more than a it's an institution, and the only place that George Desoulis has ever felt at home. A world-weary subeditor with a bookish sensibility and a painful past, George is one of nature's loners.
But a late-night encounter with an unorthodox and self-assured reporter, Cassandra Gwan, begins to unravel both of their carefully managed worlds. As the decline of the newspaper enters a desperate stage, George and Cassandra struggle to balance their turbulent relationship with their responsibilities to family, and the compromises each has built their life upon.
With a deft wit and a sharp eye for emotional complexity, Pippos examines the stories we tell ourselves, and the ways people handle grief, guilt and generational change. The Transformations is a novel about endings - of dreams, relationships, institutions- and the chance of new beginnings.
PRAISE FOR THE TRANSFORMATIONS
'Andrew Pippos is one of Australia's best novelists. The Transformations shows his perfect emotional pitch, his gift for folding big things into small baskets of domestic life in prose that goes straight to the heart. Who knew he could write another novel as good as Lucky's? Here it is.' - MALCOLM KNOX
'In this intelligent, disarming and capacious novel, Andrew Pippos pulls the covers back on the public and private self. As we follow the gloriously messy lives of George, Cassandra and Elektra, we're reminded that the antidote to solitude lies in what we long for or desire. With its mysterious undertow, its delight in human fallibility, its backdrop of momentous social and technological change, The Transformations is a searching, fate-filled epic for our times.' - MIREILLE JUCHAU
'A beautifully written novel, understated, intimate and humane, reminiscent for me of John Williams' Stoner in its examination of quotidian lives and the quiet dignity of its protagonist.' - CHRIS WOMERSLEY
'A novel of great clarity, precision and feeling. Whenever I wasn't reading it I wished I was.' - ROBBIE ARNOTT
'A moving story of loss, labour and recovery.' - TEGAN BENNETT DAYLIGHT
'The Transformations is an exploration of vulnerable masculinity written with great tenderness.' - GEORGE HADDAD
It’s rare to read a book about relationships, work, family, that feels like it’s written by an adult for adult readers. This is that book. Alternately funny, sad, curious about human relations and change, Pippos has created characters I care about and has written with compassion, insight and wisdom that feels hard-earned. A very thoughtful book that will stay with me.
Everything changes in the middle. In the final scene, George is finally baptised into a new life, though it is unclear to what degree the ambiguities of his previous one remain. I particularly enjoyed the story of George and his daughter.
4/5 - but bumping the rating. Excellent prose. Good ruminations on relationships. Fun backdrop with Sydney newspaper workplace backdrop. All good stuff.
I loved this novel. For me, it joins Andrea Goldsmith’s A Buried Life as some of the best Australian contemporary life writing . Relationships are depicted really well, there are genuine characters working through life’s challenges. Work life matters, the setting is often in George’s workplace , a Sydney newspaper room. Cass is there too but the focus with her is in her home or his apartment. These interiors matter, they are recognisable and show what sort of people they are. Change is the theme, in various spheres. Basically we all resist it.
I wanted to like this novel more for the following reasons. The main character is a kind man. The backdrop is that of a newsroom at a newspaper. There is a love story and a feisty daughter. But it just didn’t lift off the page in the way that great novels do. It felt flat. In thinking about it after, George, the main character, a sub-editor with the Sydney-based newspaper The National, feels a bit one- dimensional. Some characters are hard to bring to life. George is conflict-avoidant over both smaller work issues (a poster that is published that is embarrassing) and large personal issues such as the way his ex-partner treats him and their daughter. It’s not a surprise that he is a bit lonely but also not particularly interested in social connection. It’s hard to make a main character out of someone who is so withdrawn and lacking in energy.
The book’s title refers not only to changes in the newspaper industry (it’s 2014 and advertising revenues have well and truly dried up) but also to the relationship that begins between a reporter at the paper, Cassandra, and George. George’s ability to make connections and to love are suppressed because of trauma in his past. Cassandra is married with two young children and is experimenting with polyamory.
One reviewer saw George’s passivity as a positive, writing: “Pippos uses mundanity to anchor the reader in George’s bustling workplace and book-strewn apartment with a relative peace. That might seem antithetical to producing the necessary conflict of a novel but in art as in life, conflict is ever-present. Passivity necessarily mutes the volume, colour, and depth of a life’s potential, which poses a conflict in and of itself.” (https://www.artshub.com.au/news/revie...)
Another reviewer describes the novel as “tender”, and goes on to say that it: “…canvasses myriad issues: the balance of long-term relationships, parenthood and responsibility versus sexual freedom and individual autonomy; the lasting effects of historic child abuse and alcoholism; and class divisions.” (https://www.theguardian.com/books/202...)
Another writes: “With limited dialogue, the novel relies heavily on the storytelling of the third-person omnipresent narrator. As a reader, we witness all these events unfold, but it still feels like we’re held at arm’s length.” (https://honisoit.com/2025/10/review-t...) This comment feels the closest to my experience of the novel which I think could have been more gripping.
George Desoulis feels at home as a subeditor at the National, a fictional broadsheet newspaper located in Darlinghurst, Sydney. But change is coming. The novel opens with two of George’s colleagues being farewelled, and his encounter with Cassandra Gwan, a reporter, who tells him that ‘Everyone likes you.’ George wonders about that comment all weekend.
Cassandra is married with two small children. She and her husband Nico have decided to have sex with other people. George and Cassandra begin a relationship. And George’s life is further complicated by the arrival of his teenage daughter Elektra. Life is full of compromises for both George and Cassandra.
The novel is full of transformations, including to the National. George’s daughter Elektra is trying to find her own place in the world, while Cassandra’s husband wrestles with demons of his own. Elektra’s mother, Madeleine has her own inflexible views about where George and Elektra fit into her life. And we learn that there are elements of George’s past which shape his personality and choices.
I’ll leave the story there and simply add that Mr Pippos brings his flawed and very human characters to life. I enjoyed this novel.
A contemporary drama about folks who feel so real you might know someone in their situation, The Transformations may not be the typical “Happily Ever After”, but it is a portrait into an unorthodox family life. It also covers a wide range of topics from the declining role of print media in a shifting marketplace to alcoholism and familial breakdown. Pippos is excellent at painting his characters in a realistic light, no matter their flaws.
I enjoyed Pippos’ other book, Lucky’s, far more than this but I suppose I really became attached to his titular character there. Unfortunately for him, I judged this work against that one, but I still really enjoyed the story and could recommend this for lovers of contemporary fiction.
A pity, I liked Lucky's.... but at page 81 I'd had enough. I'd read dribs and drabs of it, lost interest, fell asleep, started again, and now I'm giving up. *yawn* Journalists seem to think that their work is endlessly fascinating, and (some) men seem to think that detailed descriptions of sex are fascinating too.
Beautifully crafted "adult" relationship story, but strangely remote. The central characters never really grabbed me and the plot meandered along for a while in the middle section. There is a lot of relationship stuff (marriage break down and the effects on children, ethical "open" marriage, the effects of additions on family members, etc) set against a backdrop of the decline of print journalism. All well and good, but the novel just never really grabbed me. Still worth reading for the quality of writing.