Longlisted for the 2025 Stella Prize

Melanie Cheng – The Burrow

Fiction · Text Publishing

About the Book

Amy, Jin and Lucie are leading isolated lives in their partially renovated, inner city home. They are not happy, but they are also terrified of change. When they buy a pet rabbit for Lucie, and then Amy’s mother, Pauline, comes to stay, the family is forced to confront long-buried secrets. Will opening their hearts to the rabbit help them to heal or only invite further tragedy?

The Burrow tells an unforgettable story about grief and hope. With her characteristic compassion and eye for detail, Melanie Cheng reveals the lives of others—even of a small rabbit.

The Burrow recreates a feeling of false security in its pages. It is not until days after finishing Cheng’s work you realise, with panic, that you’ve been afraid the whole time. 

– 2025 Stella Prize Judges

About the Author


Melanie Cheng

Melanie Cheng is a writer and general practitioner. She was born in Adelaide, grew up in Hong Kong and now lives in Melbourne. Her debut collection of short stories, Australia Day, won the Victorian Premier’s Literary Award for an Unpublished Manuscript in 2016 and the Victorian Premier’s Literary Award for Fiction in 2018. Room for a Stranger, her highly acclaimed first novel, was published in 2019.

Further Reading


Judges’ Report

Melanie Cheng’s The Burrow is among those wonderful creations that continue their careful work long after the final page has been turned. Here, the power of Cheng’s craft is found in a restraint that feels almost deceptive, and certainly later reveals an artful layering. This is the story of Amy and Jin Lee, their pre-teen daughter Lucie and Amy’s mother Pauline. Pauline had a stroke while watching the couple’s second child, Ruby, in the bath. That Ruby drowned was not Pauline’s fault, but the shame and grief has done its dirty work and they are all disconnected from each other. Then the pandemic strikes, and we all know how that turned out. Set during the Covid19 pandemic, Cheng avoids the obvious isolation metaphors and instead invites the reader into a psychological study of an adopted pet rabbit, Fiver. Riffing on Kafka’s short story of the same name about a burrowing creature desperate to reinforce its subterranean labyrinth against all manner of terrors, The Burrow recreates a feeling of false security in its pages. It is not until days after finishing Cheng’s work you realise, with panic, that you’ve been afraid the whole time.

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