Unprecedented Times
A Novel
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- Pre-Order
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- Expected Aug 18, 2026
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
Malavika Kannan establishes herself as an inimitable voice of Gen Z in this piercing coming-of-age debut novel.
Which comes first: experience or narrative? Rishi thinks she knows the answer as she arrives on campus for her first year at Stanford. A burnt-out youth climate activist, she used to want to save the world, but now she just wants to have gay sex. Her plan is set—she’s going to leave behind the strict trappings of her Indian American childhood in Florida, study literature, experiment with love, and write all about it. Within a few months, she makes her first best friend, falls in love with her situationship, and promptly gets her heart broken.
What is not a part of Rishi’s plan is the onset of the COVID pandemic. As the outside world becomes a terrifying place, she increasingly finds solace in the friendships she’s made. Instead of virtual college, however, Rishi and her classmates join a farm collective, where their political discussions and growing disillusionment collide with sexual tension and responsibility. It’s only when those relationships start fracturing under the stress of careless decisions, unrequited crushes, jealousies, and, yes, unprecedented times, that Rishi begins to question her own story.
Unprecedented Times captures the beauty, humor, pain, and straight-up chaos that exist in relationships between best friends and lovers, mothers and daughters, and between storytellers and themselves. Malavika Kannan’s fresh, arresting novel is a testament to the power of self-narrative for Gen Z American women: of writing oneself into existence where no previous script exists.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In the tender and sharp-witted adult debut from YA novelist Kannan (All the Yellow Suns), an Indian American undergrad explores an alternative path for her life during Covid-19. Raised by immigrant parents in Okeechobee, Fla., Rishi feels "like a big fish in a small pond, except the pond was actually a swamp and full of racist alligators." She's beginning to embrace her queerness, and is excited to move across the country and enroll at Stanford in 2019, "for the main purposes of reading books and kissing girls." Shortly after her arrival, she has her first sexual experience with a woman and becomes "an official, card-carrying queer woman." She also becomes fast friends with her roommate and eagerly anticipates a summer trip to Moscow to study Russian literature. Then those plans are scuttled by Covid. At home with her parents during the lockdown, Rishi becomes depressed and begins to question whether a "future that unspools in steady four-year increments" is right for her. Instead of taking online classes in the fall, she joins a "BIPOC farming collective in rural Pennsylvania" with her college friends. But what was supposed to provide answers raises more questions for Rishi about her future in this simultaneously painful and laugh-out-loud narrative, as friendships are tested and "all sorts of things are drifting apart with the tide." Readers will find much to love in this smart and searching coming-of-age tale.