Longlisted for the 2016 Epigram Books Fiction Prize By the author of Playing Madame Mao, hailed by Time magazine as "one of the best novels ever written about Singapore". Ismael, a transplanted Singaporean, lives on a bucolic suburban Brisbane street. His job is to decide whether asylum-seekers get to stay in the country, a dilemma that never fails to remind him of his own immigrant status. But then his life begins to take on the hue of a nightmare: his neighbour inexplicably commits suicide, his wife dies of cancer, his daughter abandons him for the United States, and his Siamese cat goes missing. In Lau Siew Mei’s new novel, an enclosed Australian neighbourhood becomes a microcosm of a world increasingly hostile towards migrants.
Lau Siew Mei Knihy
Tato autorka zkoumá složité otázky identity a příslušnosti prostřednictvím svého psaní. Její díla se často zabývají tématy migrace a hledání domova, vykreslují hluboké lidské emoce s citem pro kulturní nuance. Skrze své příběhy přináší poutavý pohled na zkušenosti těch, kdo překonávají hranice. Její próza je oceňována pro svou stylistickou obratnost a schopnost vyvolat silné emoce.
