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2024 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction (nominee)
2023 Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Fiction (nominee)
Any new book by Yiyun Li is a cause for celebration Sigrid Nunez
One of our finest living authors New York Times
A dazzling new collection of short stories written over a decade, spanning loss, alienation, ageing and the strangeness of contemporary life from Yiyun Li, the prize-winning author of The Book of GooseA grieving mother makes a spreadsheet of everyone shes lost. A professor develops a troubled intimacy with her hairdresser. And every year, a restless woman receives an email from a strange man twice her age and several states away. In Yiyun Lis stories, people strive for an ordinary existence until doing so becomes unsustainable, until the surface cracks and grand mysterious forces death, violence, estrangement come to light. And even everyday life is laden with meaning, studded with indelible details: a filched jar of honey, a mound of wounded ants, a photograph kept hidden for many years, until it must be seen.
Li is a breathtakingly original writer, an alchemist of opposites: tender and unsentimental, metaphysical and blunt, funny and horrifying, omniscient and yet acutely aware of just how much we cannot know. Beloved for her novels and memoirs, she returns here to her earliest form, gathering short stories and a remarkable novella never before published in the UK. Taken together, the stories in Wednesday's Child articulate the true cost of living with all Lis trademark unnerving beauty and searing wisdom.
Quiet, subtle and often agonisingly wrenching Li explores the brittle fractures within the human heart A shimmering meditation Financial Times
Strands of melancholy are braided through Li��s tender, thoughtful stories Daily Mail
Against the backdrop of threat, Lis characters meditate coolly on meaning and mortality Observer
Genre: Literary Fiction
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