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SAYONARA BABY

A sensitive and convincing account of Australian youth culture.

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In this novel, an aspiring writer navigates unstable relationships during the early days of the Australian punk scene in the early 1980s.

Skilbeck, the author of Australian Fugue: The Antipode Room(2015), organizes the story of Roxanne “Roxy” Bergson around her romantic interactions with two men. Northern Irish Roxy, who was living in Japan, arrives for college in Adelaide with Samuel, her partner of four years—a man with whom, in her estimation, she was “supposed to have split up weeks before.” She finds Samuel particularly burdensome after she meets and sleeps with Raymond Furnett, an older university student and performance artist, so she confesses her infidelity to Samuel to push him to leave her. For Roxy, Raymond sparks “an overpowering Desire for experiences that would open up new opportunities, realms of being and becoming” that she can fulfill at college. The author’s use of the capital D, as well as Roxy’s tendency toward metaphysical terminology, effectively reveals her propensity for idealization; she even refers to Raymond as a “punk Nijinsky” during one of his performances involving self-harm. Roxy’s story is sure to inspire readers to recall their own youthful rebellions, and not just because of its accounts of wild antics but also because of its poeticism, which tends to linger in the mind. Take Roxy’s reaction to receiving a letter from Raymond (“My nerve endings shrieked like subliminal fruit bats at the sight of it”) or how she describes the “dangerous energy” and “crackling” air around a typewriter that Raymond steals for her to replace one she left on a train. Overall, the novel manages to authentically capture the physical and emotional exuberance of young artists and writers while also tempering it with mature reflection—and showing respect for both points of view.

A sensitive and convincing account of Australian youth culture.

Pub Date: Dec. 7, 2021

ISBN: 978-0-645-19410-4

Page Count: 240

Publisher: Borderstream Books

Review Posted Online: Nov. 11, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2022

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THE FORTUNATE ONES

An impressive literary balancing act that entertains as it enriches.

A hefty political page-turner about what it means to have money and how we fall in love with it.

Tarkington begins his pungent political drama with an epigraph from Robert Penn Warren’s All the King’s Men, announcing his lofty intentions before the novel proper has even begun. By turns sprawling and intimate, the book looks at the blessing and curse of Southern noblesse oblige through the eyes of those who have and those who don’t. Arch Creigh got his leg up from a new-money uncle, and he sees his future in the realm of Republican politics in his native Nashville. His boyhood friend, also the story’s narrator, is Charlie Boykin, a conscientious poor kid with a young, pretty mom and only a few scruples about accepting a helping hand. Tarkington is a gifted storyteller, largely because he knows how to let his finely developed characters do the heavy lifting. Money isn’t all that separates the novel’s nouveau riche from its reluctant strivers. There’s also the matter of idealism, always an iffy prospect in politics; and authenticity, which grows elusive as fine living and friends in high places seduce and destroy what lies in their paths. Charlie, who didn’t grow up with money, essentially falls in love with what and whom it represents, including Arch’s wife, Vanessa. Tarkington weaves in some scandal—an affair, an abortion, and enough secrets to keep readers guessing. But he’s not just prompting the next page turn. The novel is concerned with what lies beneath both the best intentions and worst impulses. There’s a tantalizingly thin line between love and desire here. Mistaking one for the other is easy. It’s also catastrophic.

An impressive literary balancing act that entertains as it enriches.

Pub Date: Jan. 5, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-61620-680-2

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Algonquin

Review Posted Online: Sept. 29, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2020

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OUR MISSING HEARTS

Underscores that the stories we tell about our lives and those of others can change hearts, minds, and history.

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In a dystopian near future, art battles back against fear.

Ng’s first two novels—her arresting debut, Everything I Never Told You (2014), and devastating follow-up, Little Fires Everywhere (2017)—provided an insightful, empathetic perspective on America as it is. Her equally sensitive, nuanced, and vividly drawn latest effort, set in a dystopian near future in which Asian Americans are regarded with scorn and mistrust by the government and their neighbors, offers a frightening portrait of what it might become. The novel’s young protagonist, Bird, was 9 when his mother—without explanation—left him and his father; his father destroyed every sign of her. Now, when Bird is 12, a letter arrives. Because it is addressed to “Bird,” he knows it's from his mother. For three years, he has had to answer to his given name, Noah; repeat that he and his father no longer have anything to do with his mother; try not to attract attention; and endure classmates calling his mother a traitor. None of it makes sense to Bird until his one friend, Sadie, fills him in: His mother, the child of Chinese immigrants, wrote a poem that had improbably become a rallying cry for those protesting PACT—the Preserving American Culture and Traditions Act—a law that had helped end the Crisis 10 years before, ushering in an era in which violent economic protests had become vanishingly rare, but fear and suspicion, especially for persons of Asian origin, reigned. One of the Pillars of PACT—“Protects children from environments espousing harmful views”—had been the pretext for Sadie’s removal from her parents, who had sought to expose PACT’s cruelties and, Bird begins to understand, had prompted his own mother’s decision to leave. His mother's letter launches him on an odyssey to locate her, to listen and to learn. From the very first page of this thoroughly engrossing and deeply moving novel, Bird’s story takes wing. Taut and terrifying, Ng’s cautionary tale transports us into an American tomorrow that is all too easy to imagine—and persuasively posits that the antidotes to fear and suspicion are empathy and love.

Underscores that the stories we tell about our lives and those of others can change hearts, minds, and history.

Pub Date: Oct. 4, 2022

ISBN: 978-0-593-49254-3

Page Count: 352

Publisher: Penguin Press

Review Posted Online: Aug. 1, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2022

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