You People
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- 8,99 €
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- 8,99 €
Publisher Description
'A moving, authentic, humane novel which raises fundamental questions about what it means to be kind in an unkind world' Guardian
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The Pizzeria Vesuvio looks like any other Italian restaurant in London - with a few small differences. The chefs who make the pizza fiorentinas are Sri Lankan, and half the kitchen staff are illegal immigrants.
At the centre is Tuli, the restaurant's charismatic proprietor and resident Robin Hood, who promises to help anyone in need. Welsh nineteen-year-old Nia, haunted by her troubled past, is running from her family. Shan, having fled the Sri Lankan civil war, is desperate to find his.
But when Tuli's guidance leads them all into dangerous territory, and the extent of his mysterious operation unravels, each is faced with an impossible moral choice.
In a world where the law is against you, how far would you be willing to lie for a chance to live?
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'Intelligent and heart-piercing - an exceptional novel about the Britain we live in, even if we choose not to see it' Kamila Shamsie, author of Home Fire
'Asks tough questions about the nature of goodness in an unfair society' Sunday Telegraph BOOK OF THE WEEK
'Lively, poetically written and above all compassionate' Sunday Times
'A female lead who isn't defined by a romantic story arc? Yes please. Lalwani's serious, ravishing way of writing about the secret life of Britain is just what we need' Times
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A London pizzeria owner helps undocumented people in the nuanced latest from Lalwani (Gifted). Nia, a Welsh-Indian 19-year-old, waits tables at Vesuvio, recently free from a childhood spent caring for her younger sister and neglectful, alcoholic, and drug-addicted mother. Shan, a Sri Lankan cook, is in debt to Vesuvio's owner, Tuli, who set up Shan with a job and place to stay after he escaped from Sri Lanka and left his wife and child behind. Shan frequently wonders what motivated Tuli to help him, and what Tuli wants in return ("It became apparent over time that in order to borrow from this man, he was going to have to sit with him again and again, to what end?"). Meanwhile, Nia and Tuli discuss how to choose which people to help as Immigration Police scour the city. Their grasp on a sense of what's right and wrong is further tested as Tuli and Shan get closer to locating Shan's family in Sri Lanka through Tuli's contacts. The descriptions of immigration issues are powerful, and so is Lalwani's deep immersion in restaurant life: the gossip, the personalities among regulars and staff, and the surrogate family dynamics. Lalwani's story surges with passion, intrigue, and a rigorous eye toward British immigration policy.