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Gold Diggers: 'Magical and entirely original' Shondaland
By (Author) Sanjena Sathian
Simon & Schuster Ltd
Simon & Schuster Ltd
19th August 2021
United Kingdom
Hardback
352
Width 153mm, Height 234mm, Spine 25mm
* SOON TO BE A MINDY KALING TV SERIES *
* A Book of the Month pick by CNN, Bustle, PopSugar, Entertainment Weekly and Vox *
* One ofThe Washington Post's 10 Best Books of 2021 *
* Longlisted for the Center for Fiction's First Novel Prize *
Achingly familiar and marvellously inventive a dizzyingly original, fiercely funny, deeply wise novel Celeste Ng
Completelyoriginal, utterly absorbing, complex and confidentKaren Joy Fowler
Truly funny, insightful, smart and filled with wonderful characters unmissable Ann Napolitano
ANYONE CAN BE EXTRAORDINARY. BUT IT COMES AT A PRICE
Neil Narayans parents moved to America for a better life, and his perfect older sister is now headed to an elite university. Neil is funny and smart, but he is not living up to his parents dream. While he tries to want their version of success, mostly, Neil just wants his neighbour across the street, Anita Dayal.
Once a lot like Neil, Anita is truly thriving academically, athletically and socially. Anita has a secret: she and her mother Anjali have been brewing an ancient alchemical potion from stolen gold that harnesses the ambition of the jewellery's original owner. Anita just needs a little boost to get into Harvard. When Neil who needs a whole lot more stumbles onto their secret and joins in the plot, events spiral into a tragedy that rips their community apart.
Ten years later, Neil is an oft-stoned history grad student studying the California gold rush. Anita has given up her high-flying tech career and is working as an event planner, just for now. Anjali, the woman who gave them both so much, is in trouble, and only gold can save her. What choice do Anita and Neil have but to pull off one last heist
Gold Diggers is a dazzling coming-of-age story that speaks to anyone who ever wondered quite how they belong, and who ever dreamed of being the very best they could be.
'Blends magic, mythology, alchemy and melodrama into a story about anxiety, assimilation and ambition Adelightful concoctionGuardian
'Asmart and inventive coming-of-age tale that blends magical realism with a literary exploration of identity and the American dreamCulturefly
A funny, fresh voice in fiction and an intricately layered story full of believable characters and just a smidge of magical realismRed
A brilliant, dazzling coming-of-age story Womans Own
'A spellbinding read'heat
'This smart coming-of-age tale dazzles'Evening Standard
'In a perfect alchemical blend of familiar and un-,Gold Diggerstakes a wincingly hilarious coming-of-age story, laces it with magical realism and a trace of satire, and creates a world that's both achingly familiar and marvelously inventive. Written with such assurance it's hard to believe it's Sanjena Sathian's debut, this is a dizzyingly original, fiercely funny, deeply wise novel about the seductive powers and dangers of borrowed ambition'Celeste Ng, author ofLittle Fires Everywhere
'In an alchemic blend of modern American ambition and ancient myth, this sometimes fiercely funny caper, sometimes heart-breaking coming of age story, is a truly immersive read. In the end,Gold Diggers is a beautifully crafted, strange, and deeply touching story about the search for national and personal identity. A gorgeous and gripping read'Nydia Hetherington, author ofA Girl Made of Air
'Is the American dream about hard work and sacrifice or is it about the lure of the Gold Rush, ofquick riches there for the takingGreed,regret and love are all at work here in Sathians completelyoriginal, utterly absorbing, complex and confident debut novel. A bravuraperformance from an exciting new voice'Karen Joy Fowler,author ofWe Are All Completely Beside Ourselves
'Awork of 24-karat genius Sathian has created a funny, compassionate, tragic novel of astonishing cultural richness The result is a novel of Indian magic and modern technology, a parody of New World ambition and an elegy of assimilation' Washington Post
'In some ways, Gold Diggers is a delightful concoction of the best of South Asias literary offerings, reminiscent of Hanif Kureishis irreverent humour in The Buddha of Suburbia and the magic realism of Mohsin Hamids Exit West. But Sathian has forged a narrative path entirely her own... she tackles issues of mental health, the "model minority"trap and the generation gap with a fresh literary toolkit and voice'Guardian
'[A]chingly real reminders of what it was like to be an adolescent in post-9/11 America, feeling the weight of your parents dreams on yourshoulders... The tension Sathian builds is one of teenage insecurityswelling into adulthood, until disillusion overthrows the tyranny of Americanperfectionism... exquisite prose humming with contagious anxiety' New York TimesBook Review
'This terrific debut novel uses heists and alchemy todeconstruct immigrant ambition, strivingand sin... what makes the novel so compelling is the playfulness with whichSathian deconstructs it. You feel for thecharacters and the ways they have been warped by their pursuit ofgreatness and the ways they are haunted by their sinsbut also,there are heists and alchemy. Its a blast'Vox
'The coming-of-age genre meets magical realism meets heist caper Funny and exciting, its an entertaining new twist on the immigrant experience'CNN
'Deftly weaves together magic and history to produce a compelling coming-of-age story'New Yorker
'Upends our ideas of what it takes to make it in America. Smart, funnyand completely engrossing' Andrew Ridker, author ofThe Altruists
'Gold Diggersis so many thingstruly funny, insightful, smartand filled with wonderful characters. I loved reading this novel, and loved watching Neil Narayan grow up and grapple with the America his immigrant parents believed in. Neil's journey to figuring out what he believes, which includes a multi-layered exploration into the properties of gold, and his strange and wonderful friendship with his next door neighbor, Anita, make this story unmissable'Ann Napolitano, bestselling author ofDear Edward
'Rollicking, at times painfuland ultimately intensely satisfying... twines historical fictions and truths and family histories into the main narrative, exemplifying how time both does and does not make a linear kind of sense, how past, present and future's paths collide at times in unexpected ways'NPR
'A dazzling and delightful work of fiction by an exciting new literary talent... Sathian has produced a beguiling elixir withGold Diggers, skilfully stirring myth into a playful yet powerful modern-day examination of the American dream and the second-generation citizens who pursue it. A fabulist amalgam ofThe Great GatsbyandThe Catcher in the Rye, its an engrossing cautionary tale as well as a shrewd appraisal of what we consider successand the moral sacrifices we make to achieve it. Imaginative and intoxicating,Gold Diggersrichly rewards its readers'BookPage
'Filled with pathos, humor, slices of American historyand an adrenaline-pumping heist, Sathian's spectacular debut also highlights the steep costs of the all-American dream... Pure gold'Booklist
A sprawling tale of magical realism, gold heistsand the quest to attain the American dream PopSugar
A feast of a story breaks apart the mythology of monolithic culture with the perfect alchemy of humour, magicand irresistible albeit flawed people. Let it sweep you off your feet BuzzFeed
'A sweeping tale that combines the classic coming-of-age and teenage rebellion genre with magic realism and social satire... a riveting read... Sathian's prose potently captures the weight of the model minority myth and the constraints it places on a certain subset of Asian Americans'Huffington Post
'Sathians satire is pitch perfect She captures not only the melancholia of the immigrants social estrangement, but also the painful expectation that this melancholia should be worth it somehow, that one should achieve and then achieve some more The heist is magnificentcanny and moving and just plain fun Her prose lifts off: theres a delight she takes in writing humorously about magic that shows off the scope of her immense talent.'LA Review of Books