Gunk
A Novel
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4.9 • 7 Ratings
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- $13.99
Publisher Description
THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW EDITORS' CHOICE • An electrifying first novel from “a fresh new voice in fiction” (Emma Cline, New York Times bestselling author of The Guest), the story of two women circling one another—working side-by-side, sleeping with the same man, inching toward friendship—until an unplanned pregnancy reveals the true nature of their connection.
Jules has been divorced from her ex-husband Leon for five years, but she still works with him at Gunk, the grotty student nightclub he owns in central Brighton. She spends her nights serving shots and watching, from behind the bar, as Leon flirts with students on the dancefloor. In the early hours of the morning, she trudges home to sleep alone. But then Leon hires eighteen-year-old Nim to work the bar with Jules—Nim, with her shaved head and steady pour, her disarming sweetness and sudden distance—and Jules finds herself jolted awake. When Nim discovers she’s pregnant, Jules agrees to help. As the months pass, and the relationship between the two women grows increasingly intimate and perplexing, it emerges that Nim has her own unexpected gifts to give.
Now, alone in her small flat, Jules is holding a baby, just twenty-four-hours old, who still smells of Nim. But no one knows where Nim is, or if she's coming back. What could the future—for Jules, Nim, and this unnamed baby—possibly look like?
Raw, surprising, tender and wise, Gunk is an exhilarating debut novel exploring love and desire, safety and destruction, chaos and control— and family in all its forms.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
Author Saba Sams dives poignantly into themes of love, growth, queerness, and motherhood in this incisive and deeply felt novel. Thirtysomething Jules is drifting through life, still working at her dirtbag ex-husband Leon’s nightclub, Gunk. But the drifting stops abruptly when she begins meets a 19-year-old named Nim, a fellow Gunk employee whom Leon soon impregnates. Sams authentically captures the tensions and gray zones of adult relationships, from Jules’ exasperation at her ex’s immature behavior to the circuitous way it impacts her own dreams of motherhood. Sams is a masterful scene setter, drawing us into her characters’ lives through the places they inhabit. If you’re craving a depiction of motherhood that’s rebellious, a little queer, and decidedly modern, Gunk is essential reading.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Sams's intimate debut centers on a complicated relationship between two British women. It opens with Julia, the middle-aged narrator, caring for a newborn baby in Brighton, after the baby's mother, Nim, disappeared from the hospital. Julia reflects on how she wound up in the seaside party town at 18, desperate to escape the conventional life laid out for her by her "placid, attentive" parents. In flashbacks, she recounts falling for Leon, the charismatic and volatile owner of Gunk, a grimy nightclub, in her late 20s. What began as an adventure curdles into marriage, toil, and divorce, as Julia works behind the bar, propping up the failing venue and her now ex-husband, who continues to emotionally drain her. Her life tilts when Leon hires Nim, a teenage runaway. Julia is enchanted by Nim's unstudied confidence and impressed by her skill (she claims to have worked as a bartender since she was 14, having lied about her age). When Nim sleeps with Leon, Julia's feelings of betrayal expose the fragile dynamics between the trio. As the novel unfolds, Julia gradually reveals why Nim disappeared. Sams's writing is assured and muscular ("Sometimes I could grope around inside myself and come up surprised," Julia observes), and the novel subtly explores Julia's motivations in caring for the baby and what a happy family might look like. This is striking.