On fragile waves

E. Lily Yu

Book - 2021

"The haunting story of a family of dreamers and tale-tellers looking for home in an unwelcoming world. Traces one girl's migration from war to peace, loss to loss, home to home. Firuzeh and her brother Nour are children of fire, born in an Afghanistan fractured by war. When their parents, their Atay and Abay, decide to leave, they spin fairy tales of their destination, the mythical land and opportunities of Australia. As the family journeys from Pakistan to Indonesia to Nauru, heading toward a hope of home, they must rely on fragile and temporary shelters, strangers both mercenary and kind, and friends who vanish as quickly as they're found. When they arrive in Australia, what seemed like a stable shore gives way to treachero...us currents."--Publisher description.

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Subjects
Genres
Bildungsromans
Domestic fiction
Magic realist fiction
Fantasy fiction
Published
New York : Erewhon Books 2021.
Language
English
Main Author
E. Lily Yu (author)
Item Description
"Content notice: [This novel] contains references to violence, abuse, and racism."--T.p. verso.
Physical Description
273 pages ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781645660095
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Stubborn, bold dreamer Firuzeh, her brother Nour, and their parents, their Atay and Abay, set off from Afghanistan on a long, difficult journey as refugees to find asylum in Australia by way of Pakistan, Indonesia, and Nauru. They face rocking waters, dirty camps, and spitting prejudice as they attempt to find a safe home amid vanishing friends, tenuous lifelines, and broken promises. Yu's debut is rooted in Firuzeh's fervent desire for stability and in her mother's rich emotional center. Yu occasionally dives into a peripheral character's perspective--the English tutor teaching Atay and Abay, a guard working at the refugee camp--giving a grounding vividness to the story of the Daizangi family's quest for home that is both vast and intensely intimate. Yu's writing is poetic, the lines of her dialogue strumming into one another, mirroring the way that Firuzeh's stories begin to blend reality and folklore--as Firuzeh crafts tales to make sense of her reality, and as the incomprehensible tragedies around her morph into imaginary friends that Firuzeh and Nour can't seem to shake. On Fragile Waves is a lyrical fabulist novel that will enchant readers of both literary fiction and fantasy.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Yu's outstanding debut opens with an enticing work of visual poetry that sets the stage for a story built of stories about the hopes of a family searching for a place where they can feel safe. Firuzeh and her family flee Afghanistan in the middle of the night, trusting hearsay that the people smugglers escorting them are honest. As they travel by land, air, and boat, the family endures cramped quarters, a waning food and water supply, and a storm that takes refugees' lives, but Firuzeh fills even the tensest moments of their journey with fantastical stories of what their lives will be once they've reached Australia. Unfortunately, once they do reach their destination, the dream of freedom, safety, and comfort remains elusive in the face of poor living conditions and xenophobia. In flowing, lyrical prose, Yu showcases the power of folklore and the pain of displacement. This is a knockout. Agent: Markus Hoffman, Regal Hoffman & Assoc. (Feb.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

DEBUT Yu follows up her sf and fantasy short fiction, including the Hugo-, Locus-, and Nebula-nominated and Astounding Award-winning "The Cartographer Wasps and the Anarchist Bees," with an evocative and heart-lacerating debut novel. Firuzeh and her brother Nour flee war-torn Kabul with their parents, who tell them fairy tales to ease the journey through Pakistan and Indonesia to Nauru Island, their gateway to Australia. The journey is hard, their stay in Nauru's immigration detention camp harder, and even as the family makes it to Australia, they are not sure whether they will be allowed to stay. As she and Nour adjust to a life that may never be theirs, Firuzeh is helped along by some hardheaded advice from a drowned girl named Nasima, a magic realist touch that (with the interwoven fairy tales) serves to amplify a situation both harsh and unimaginable--can people really be made to suffer this way and for naught? While Yu's exactingly detailed story is told in the third person, the voices of the children predominate, which makes this wrenching portrait of the immigrant experience especially affecting. VERDICT Essential fiction to understand our world; Yu will draw in new fans while continuing to intrigue those who have read her for years.--Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal

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