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Western Lane

(Hardback)

Available Formats


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Western Lane

Contributors:

By (Author) Chetna Maroo

ISBN:

9781529094626

Publisher:

Pan Macmillan

Imprint:

Picador

Publication Date:

26th September 2023

UK Publication Date:

11th May 2023

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Genre:
Fiction/Non-fiction:

Fiction

Main Subject:
Other Subjects:

Modern and contemporary fiction: general and literary
Family life fiction
Narrative theme: Coming of age
Narrative theme: Death, grief, loss
Narrative theme: Identity / belonging
Squash and rackets (racquets)

Dewey:

823.92

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

176

Dimensions:

Width 144mm, Height 224mm, Spine 23mm

Weight:

289g

Description

'WOW. Western Lane is glorious. You'll want to read it over and over again.' - Aravind Adiga, author of The White Tiger A taut, enthralling first novel about grief, sisterhood, and a young athlete's struggle to transcend herself. Eleven-year-old Gopi has been playing squash since she was old enough to hold a racket. When her mother dies, her father enlists her in a quietly brutal training regimen, and the game becomes her world. Slowly, she grows apart from her sisters. Her life is reduced to the sport, guided by its rhythms: the serve, the volley, the drive, the shot and its echo. But on the court, she is not alone. She is with her pa. She is with Ged, a thirteen-year-old boy with his own formidable talent. She is with the players who have come before her. She is in awe. An indelible coming-of-age story, Chetna Maroo's first novel captures the ordinary and annihilates it with beauty. Western Lane is a valentine to innocence, to the closeness of sisterhood, to the strange ways we come to know ourselves and each other.

Reviews

The beauty of Maroos novel lies in [its] unfolding, the narrative shaped as much by what is on the page as by whats left unsaid . . . In this graceful novel, the game of squash becomes a way into Gopis grief and her attempts to process it. * The New York Times *
Melancholy is only one of the moods of this short but brimming book. Squash is also a channel for Gopis rage; for connections with other players and her longsuffering father; and for a joyous kind of freedom of expression. The novel ends with the tournament, as it must, and Ms. Maroos writing achieves its most graceful rhythms and prescient insights. Youll want to applaud. * Wall Street Journal *
Starting off as an intimate tone poem, this story of a squash-obsessed teenager expands into something with the amplitude, depth, and ringing power of a great symphony. In other words--WOW. Western Lane is glorious. Youll want to read it over and over again. -- Aravind Adiga, author of The White Tiger
Combining the precision and the efficiency of an athlete with the mysteries of childhood loss and memory, Western Lane is a novel in which we linger on every breathing line and relish every close observation. What an exceptionally talented writer Chetna Maroo is!' -- Yiyun Li, author of A Thousand Years of Good Prayers and Where Reasons End
[A] slim, subtle, moving story . . . about grief and growing up in a Gujarati family in Britain . . . A bold book [and] a quietly brilliant one. -- A D Miller, Booker-shortlisted author of Snowdrops
Chetna Maroo captures with great poignancy and accuracy the bewilderment and groping for meaning that loss bringsbut also how small acts of kindness ultimately redeem us from this loss. Truly a gem of a novel, this deceptively simple story told in a sparse, elegant style kept revealing its depths long after I had closed its pages. -- Shyam Selvadurai, author of Funny Boy
Lean, agile, and quietly deadly, Western Lane is a coming-of-age story of extraordinary artistic maturity. It is a book of young people muscling themselves through unreconciled grief, and it is a book of simmering intensities, reverberating silences, and exquisite literary timing. This is a book to both share and treasure. -- David Chariandy, author of Brother

Author Bio

Chetna Maroo lives in London, UK. Her stories have been published in the Paris Review, the Stinging Fly and the Dublin Review and she was the recipient of the 2022 Plimpton Prize for Fiction.

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