
An ambitious, wildly polyphonic and emotionally complex novel that picks under the surface of trauma, parenthood and class; Wendy Erskine’s long-form debut is an undoubtedly assured, deftly focused and refreshingly honest portrait of a diverse, modern-day Belfast. However, it’s a novel that quietly entraps whilst reading yet fails to really linger once closed.
Originally posted at x.com.
An ambitious, wildly polyphonic and emotionally complex novel that picks under the surface of trauma, parenthood and class; Wendy Erskine’s long-form debut is an undoubtedly assured, deftly focused and refreshingly honest portrait of a diverse, modern-day Belfast. However, it’s a novel that quietly entraps whilst reading yet fails to really linger once closed.
Originally posted at x.com.