by Raven Leilani ‧ RELEASE DATE: Aug. 4, 2020
Sharp, strange, propellant—and a whole lot of fun.
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After losing her day job, a troubled young artist finds herself living with her much-older lover, his inscrutable wife, and their adopted daughter in Leilani’s electric debut.
Edie meets Eric online: She's a 23-year-old Black art school dropout with a mouse-infested apartment in Bushwick and an ill-fitting administrative job at a children’s publishing imprint; he's a White archivist in an open marriage and twice her age. “The age discrepancy doesn’t bother me,” she explains, keenly aware of the dynamics of these types of exchanges, his stability and experience for the redemptive power of her youth. Of course, she has been curious about the wife, but it's only after Eric goes silent that she wanders into his unlocked house and comes face to face with Rebecca, who knows who she is and coolly invites her to stay for dinner. Afterward, Rebecca leaves her a voicemail: “I enjoyed meeting you, let’s do that again.” And so it begins. Newly fired from the publishing house for being “sexually inappropriate,” Edie is working for a delivery app when she gets an order for lobster bisque and a bone saw delivered to a VA hospital. The customer is Rebecca. The bone saw is because she’s a medical examiner. The reason Rebecca then takes Edie home with her…can’t be reduced into straightforward facts. Edie’s role in their household is perpetually tenuous and always unspoken: It is clear to her that she has been brought in, in part, “on the absurd presumption” she’d know what to do with their traumatized daughter, Akila, “simply because we are both black.” So she bonds with Akila. Sometimes, she cleans. She is neither Rebecca’s friend nor her rival. Regular envelopes with money appear on her dresser in irregular amounts, a cross between an allowance and a paycheck. And all the while, the dynamics among the four of them keep shifting, an unstable ballet of race, sex, and power. Leilani’s characters act in ways that often defy explanation, and that is part of what makes them so alive and so mesmerizing: Whose behavior, in real life, can be reduced to simple cause and effect?
Sharp, strange, propellant—and a whole lot of fun.Pub Date: Aug. 4, 2020
ISBN: 978-0-374-19432-1
Page Count: 240
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Review Posted Online: June 2, 2020
Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2020
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PERSPECTIVES
by Karin Lin-Greenberg ‧ RELEASE DATE: May 2, 2023
A disappointing novel from a much-praised writer.
This debut novel offers a group portrait of people in upstate New York trying to figure out how to build new lives.
Every day after school, Jackson Huang joins his mom, Tina, at Sunshine Clips in Greenways Mall. She tends to the needs of a dwindling roster of clients. He does his homework and sweeps up hair. Her most loyal customer is Ro Goodson, an elderly woman with a prickly personality and a knack for being offensive. Ro’s next-door neighbor Kevin manages the bookstore across from the salon. He’s been stalled on his dissertation long enough to realize that he doesn’t really want to be in academia. He lives with his wife and two kids in a tiny house he built in his mother-in-law’s backyard. Maria, who works at the fried-chicken place in the food court, is a high school senior who dreams of being an actor. Losing the lead role in West Side Story to a girl who is blond and blue-eyed makes her question herself. Their lives intersect in a variety of ways, and all of them are wondering what they’ll do when the mall closes. A dying shopping center seems like a perfect metaphor for…something, but what that something might be never quite coalesces. Instead, the mall feels like a set built for this very small cast. The scenes set in Ro and Kevin’s neighborhood and in Maria’s school also seem like they’re happening on a soundstage. Perhaps the intention here was to invoke the claustrophobia of a small town, to create the sense that the outside world isn’t real. But nothing that happens within this circumscribed environment feels real, either—not even the act of violence that serves as something of a climax. Lin-Greenberg earned critical recognition for Faulty Predictions (2014) and Vanished (2022), her collections of short fiction. But the invention and energy readers found in those stories are missing here.
A disappointing novel from a much-praised writer.Pub Date: May 2, 2023
ISBN: 9781640095434
Page Count: 304
Publisher: Counterpoint
Review Posted Online: Feb. 23, 2023
Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2023
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by Darrow Farr ‧ RELEASE DATE: May 27, 2025
A passionate powder keg of a novel.
In 1993 Corsica, a kidnapped teen conspires with her captors to incite an uprising.
If it were up to her, 17-year-old Séverine Guimard would be spending her final semesters of lycée in Paris with her friends. Instead, the aspiring actress is enduring a lonely year at an unfamiliar school on Corsica, where her French politician father is prefect. A listless Séverine is riding her bike alone one night when men grab her, bind her, and stuff her in their vehicle’s trunk. They drive her to a secluded cottage deep in the scrublands and lock her in a closet. Séverine’s abductors—Soffiu di Libertà, a trio seeking Corsica’s independence from France—demand 5 million francs and the release of a political prisoner (their fourth member) in exchange for Séverine’s safe return. Séverine’s wealthy parents promptly pay up, but France’s interior minister, presidential hopeful Bernard Jonnart, refuses to negotiate. After a weeklong stalemate, the young men debate killing Séverine, but instead relocate her to a sparsely furnished outbuilding while they plot their next move. Out of boredom and attempted ingratiation, Séverine begins discussing political philosophy with teacher Bruno, foraging with ecology student Tittu, and cooking with chef Petru. Camaraderie develops, and—deciding she wants “stardom, her future, now”—Séverine joins Soffiu di Libertà, using her beauty, charisma, and sex appeal to garner press, while also pushing the cell in an increasingly radical direction. No rebellion comes without casualties, however. Though far from breezy, Farr’s accomplished debut deftly balances heady ruminations on colonialism and revolution with relatable human moments. Too many obstacles are too easily overcome, but vibrant prose lends texture and urgency, while the fully fleshed characters’ increasingly thorny interpersonal relationships raise the story’s stakes and give it soul.
A passionate powder keg of a novel.Pub Date: May 27, 2025
ISBN: 9780593833247
Page Count: 416
Publisher: Pamela Dorman/Viking
Review Posted Online: April 19, 2025
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2025
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