
Edgware Road
Yasmin Cordery Khan
£9.99
Description
‘Part family mystery, part immigrant hustle, Edgware Road is a complete tour de force’ Junot Diaz
1981: Khalid Quraishi feels like one of the lucky ones. Working in the glitzy West End by night and spending time with his beautiful wife and daughter by day, he’s a world away from the life he left behind in Karachi.
But Khalid likes to gamble – twenty pounds on the fruit machine here, a thousand on a sure-thing investment there. And now he’s chanced upon his biggest opportunity yet, it looks like he’ll finally have his big win…
2003: Alia Quraishi doesn’t really remember her dad. She hardly ever saw him after her parents got divorced – so when she received the news that he died in an alleged accident, she had no reason to believe otherwise.
But now that almost twenty years have passed, she has questions. And with no links to her father left in the UK, Alia knows that the only way to find answers is to visit his first home in Pakistan, and connect with a family that feel more like strangers.
‘Poised to be one of the debuts of the season’ Vogue India
‘Elegant and moving’ Sathnam Sanghera
‘A brilliant, intriguing novel about identity and family’ Louise Hare
Publisher Review
Part family mystery, part immigrant hustle, Edgware Road is a complete tour de force... Khan calls up all the ghosts that prowl between children and their parents, between immigrants and their homelands, between our dreams of wealth and our hunger for love, and exorcises them with prose so lapidary and understanding so vast Khan's novel is like unto a blessing' -- Junot Diaz Poised to be one of the debuts of the season * Vogue India * A brilliant, intriguing novel about identity and family. The smells and sounds of 1980s London leap from the page and the characters feel so real that I can hardly believe they're not -- Louise Hare At a time when travelling is almost impossible, this beautiful novel transported me. An elegant and moving book from a highly promising new voice in fiction -- Sathnam Sanghera A book for readers of Bernardine Evaristo and Zadie Smith * Vogue India * A gripping mixture of mystery, family drama and insights into the immigrant experience, Khan's expansive debut depicts two generations of a London Pakistani family, and the secrets of an estranged father that keep haunting his daughter years after his death * Waterstones * A moving, evocative read * Woman's Own * An incredibly accomplished debut... This is an affecting debut focussed on the themes of family and identity -- Adele Parks
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