Bad Fruit
A Novel
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- $279.00
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- $279.00
Descripción editorial
“[A] blistering psychological thriller.” —The New York Times Book Review
"A compelling debut that fizzes with tension from start to finish, blending the subtle erudition of literary fiction with the drama and suspense of the very best thrillers. Masterful in its evocation of the complexity of mother-daughter relationships, this is a darkly fascinating, tightly plotted narrative from a writer to watch." —Harper’s Bazaar (UK)
Just graduated from high school and waiting to start college at Oxford, Lily lives under the scrutiny of her volatile Singaporean mother, May, and is unable to find kinship with her elusive British father, Charlie. When May suspects that Charlie is having an affair, there’s only one thing that calms May down: a glass of perfectly spoiled orange juice served by Lily, who must always taste it first to make sure it's just right.
As her mother becomes increasingly unhinged, Lily starts to have flashbacks that she knows aren’t her own. Over a sweltering London summer, all semblance of civility and propriety is lost, as Lily begins to unravel the harrowing history that has always cast a shadow on her mother. The horrifying secrets she uncovers will shake her family to its core, culminating in a shattering revelation that will finally set Lily free.
Beautiful and shocking, Bad Fruit is as compulsive as it is thought-provoking, as nuanced as it is explosive. A masterful exploration of mothers and daughters, inherited trauma and the race to break its devastating cycle, Bad Fruit will leave readers breathlessly questioning their own notions of femininity, race and redemption.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
King delves into toxic family ties and intergenerational trauma in her hypnotic debut. As a summer heat wave blankets London, the already thin emotional boundary between 18-year-old Lily and her mother, May, dissolves further when Lily's mind is flooded with images of a shattered glass of milk and a crumpled woman. After a doctor says they aren't hallucinations but flashbacks, Lily believes the visions are her mother's memories of abuse. Lily, who grew up with stories of May's Peranakan Chinese heritage and childhood in Singapore, bends to May's every whim, such as tasting the partly spoiled orange juice May prefers before serving it to her, and always wearing pink, May's favorite color. Lily even goes so far as to wear makeup with yellow undertones and colored contacts to hide her eyes ("white devil eyes," May calls them, convinced Lily's British father is having an affair). Not long after the flashbacks start, Lily meets Lewis, a 30-something lecturer at Oxford. A former teenage runaway from a difficult home, Lewis picks up on Lily's struggle and promises to help her get to the bottom of her flashbacks. As May's manipulative behavior escalates and Lily seeks out the truth behind the flashbacks, King rachets up the tension in this perfect blend of psychological thriller and coming-of-age. This author is off to a great start.