Fiction Reviews

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Cover image for Back in the Dday by Oliver Lovrenski

Back in the Day by Oliver Lovrenski (transl. Nichola Smalley): ‘You might love the streets but theyre never gonna love you back’

Oliver Lovrenski’s Back in the Day topped the bestseller lists in Norway for months, winning the country’s prestigious Bookseller Prize when Lovrenski was just nineteen. Set in Oslo, his episodic, fragmented novel follows four boys through their school days onto the streets into a life that will likely lead to an early death. argan was

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Cover image for On the Calculation of Volume by Solvej Balle

On the Calculation of Volume 1 by Solvej Balle (transl. Barbara J. Haveland): Here we go again

Recently shortlisted for this year’s International Booker Prize, the first book in Solvej Balle’s septology comes garlanded with praise from a wide range of writers including Jon McGregor whose endorsement swung it for me; that and its intriguing premise. On the Calculation of Volume 1 follows Tara Selter who wakes up every morning to find

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Cover image for Theft by Abdulrazak Gurnah

Theft by Abdulrazak Gurnah: A multi-layered exploration of postcolonialism

Theft is Abdulrazak Gurnah’s first novel since winning the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2021. Described as ‘one of the world’s most prominent postcolonial writers’ by the chairman of the Nobel committee, he continues to explore that theme through three young people in 1990s Zanzibar, his native country, whose lives become closely intertwined. He would

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Cover image for Elegy, Southwest by Madeleine Watts

Elegy, Southwest by Madeleine Watts: ‘Our time, perhaps, is shorter than we think’  

I spotted Madeleine Watts’s Elegy, Southwest on social media thanks to a passionately enthusiastic post from its editor. The premise of a road novel set in the desert of the American Southwest, a landscape which I’ve visited several times and loved, made me put up my hand immediately. Watts’s novel follows Eloise and Lewis over

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