Be it banning red wine from parties because it stains people’s teeth or playing tennis being the way the Stockton women show their love for one another, the book is packed with funny one-liners and well-observed writing that creates a fully realised upper-class family with all its unspoken norms and eccentricities.
Rachel Heng’s The Great Reclamation is many things. It is an epic of nation-building. It is a historical fantasy. It might be the next great Singapore novel. It is almost certainly the most gripping tale of land reclamation you will read.
But it is a measure of Smythe’s nuanced touch as a storyteller that there is the clear ring of emotional truth to all the characters, whether they are behaving well or badly. ... Her true Olympian achievement is in creating a lively story that skips lightly, yet respectfully, through its root sources while blooming with a delightful freshness for a new generation of readers.
It is the perfect vehicle for Ellis, in sparkling form here, as the observer par excellence of the numbness and dissociation prevalent in those who have had the (mis)fortune to see too much too young.
The novel reads easily, resembling young adult fiction though the characters are in their early 20s – it also expertly weaves between commentary about the lives of the Singaporean middle class and name-dropping expensive designers at the best parties.
Babysitter is yet another example of Oates’ daring to tread where other writers might avoid. Hannah, an essentially uninteresting character, manages to come alive, even if the choices that she makes at different junctures make sympathy for her difficult. This is an in-depth look at the randomness of human evil, and at its effects on the mind of an ordinary woman.
Babysitter is yet another example of Oates’ daring to tread where other writers might avoid. Hannah, an essentially uninteresting character, manages to come alive, even if the choices that she makes at different junctures make sympathy for her difficult. This is an in-depth look at the randomness of human evil, and at its effects on the mind of an ordinary woman.
Without a doubt, though, McEwan’s languid, sensitive prose remains one of the most articulate in modern literature. He writes of youth and old age with equal perspicacity, never allowing sentimentality to compromise how his characters behave.
Atkinson’s world teems with sordid colour drawn from scrupulous research. . . . It is a fine read with which to ring in yet another year of these less-than-roaring Twenties.
Babel, the latest to hit the shelves, is a delight to read and a testament to the magic of translation. It will hold particular appeal for readers who love languages, words and their etymologies.
Hauser builds her life’s inventory out of deconstructed personal narratives, resulting in a reading experience that’s rich like a complicated dessert—not for wolfing down but for savoring in small bites.
This is a boy meets girl story that is never a romance – though it is romantic… Zevin blurs the lines between reality and play… Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow is an artfully balanced novel – charming but never saccharine. The world Zevin has created is textured, expansive and, just like those built by her characters, playful.
Pippa Bailey, The Guardian
Kohda ends up weaving an unsettling yet moving universal tale that contemplates what it means to be a young woman, a minority and to be alive.
Scenes of the cultural clashes between Meddy and Nathan's family, as well as Nathan's mother's increasingly hostile attitude towards Meddy's aunties, feel painfully real. They highlight the vast differences within the Asian diaspora of the world.
Li's prose is unusually lyrical, given the genre. She writes with a painterly eye, with charcoal motion and cadmium yellow flowers, and imbues with beauty "the slow, complicated matter of peeling a museum apart".
A Lady's Guide To Fortune-Hunting turns out to be the perfect summer beach read - a smart and shockingly entertaining update of the genre. ... While the plot devices are borrowed from Heyer, Irwin depicts her characters' motives and actions with a psychological acuity that gives them contemporary verve. ... This cleverly constructed tale is as decadently pleasurable as a cream tea with all the trimmings.