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Slags by Emma Jane Unsworth: Deeply wise and hilarious
Slags by Emma Jane Unsworth: Deeply wise and hilarious

Irish Times

time25-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Times

Slags by Emma Jane Unsworth: Deeply wise and hilarious

Slags Author : Emma Jane Unsworth ISBN-13 : 978-0-00-834721-5 Publisher : The Borough Press Guideline Price : £ 16.99 Sarah Hudson is an angsty, workaholic Mancunian, still single in her early 40s and about to kiss goodbye to her inner self: a traumatised wee lassie persistently besotted with her childhood English teacher. Sarah has appetites; she's a 'caner', an enthusiast for drugs, booze, and bedding rock'n'roll singers. She reckons on a window of sex before the inevitability of post-menopausal invisibility. Deciding on a Scottish safari with her sister Juliette, they go on a motorhome tour of distilleries, more nip than tuck, more win a bag of coke than Winnebago. A road trip then, a novel about sibling love and rivalries. They stagger up to Ullapool and Cape Wrath, John O'Groats and Aviemore, fuelled by shots of Highland Park, Talisker and The Singelton. Sarah and Juliette expose their vulnerabilities, their worries over an ever-shrinking circle of friends, their Corryvreckan spiral of decline in self-esteem. A voluptuous melancholy that has Sarah determined 'she would try to let people into her broken little house of horrors'. In tone, Slags is an earthy blend of Emma Cline and Ed Atkins with a similar fixation on solipsistic inner interrogations and the palliative use of food in the face of existential despair. All this delivered in Sarah's droll confessional, her voice echt , as brightly true and un-phony as that of Holden Caulfield . Unsworth's story is packed with pithy diagnostics, conspiratorial giggles: hers is an absurdist humour of recognition over modern life's humiliations. A weird and wacky world obsessed by gut health and generalisation about generations, where 'Gen Z-ers will respect your pronouns but not you as a person'. READ MORE Unsworth is also hypersensitive to the othering of single women, the endless questioning: 'Found anyone yet?' She has too a supremely delicate sympathy to 'the eternal book balancing of siblingdom' and its bottomless 'layers of subtext', the She Ain't Heavy debts and denials. [ Emma Jane Unsworth on postnatal depression Opens in new window ] Life for the sisters is, in Powell and Pressburger's memorable phrase about postwar Vienna, 'hopeless but not serious'. This is a deeply wise and hilarious novel about a pair of clever romantics who 'always get a bit lost' and where there's no such thing as closure.

Summer reading: the 50 hottest books to read now
Summer reading: the 50 hottest books to read now

The Guardian

time21-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

Summer reading: the 50 hottest books to read now

Dream Count by Chimamanda Ngozi AdichieA rich exploration of female experience, Adichie's first novel in 10 years charts the lives and loves of four women in Nigeria and the US, from a 'dream count' of ex-boyfriends to a section inspired by Dominique Strauss-Kahn's alleged rape of a Guinean hotel worker in 2011. Magisterial, wide-ranging and delicately done. Flesh by David SzalayThis spare account of the rise and fall of a contemporary everyman, from small-town Hungary to London's elite, and back again, gains an extraordinary power through what is left unsaid: buried emotion, the silent depths of trauma, the ultimate unknowability of the self and others. A propulsive investigation into sex, power, class and masculinity. Slags by Emma Jane UnsworthNot so much a beach read as a caravan comedy. Fortysomething Sarah takes her younger sister on an ill-advised holiday through the Highlands of Scotland: drink is taken, food is cobbled together, there is bad weather and worse parking as unsuitable men and unresolved teenage trauma intrude. This exuberantly funny road trip is also a love letter to the fractious bond between siblings. Dream State by Eric PuchnerIn this big, bittersweet American family saga, golden couple Cece and Charlie are preparing to marry – and then she meets his difficult, unhappy best friend … Mistakes are made and decades sweep by in an immersive panorama of friendship and rivalry, marriages and children, tragedy and love. Meanwhile, the climate crisis bites, and the sands of time are only running in one direction. A book to lose yourself in, but one that doesn't duck the big issues. The Names by Florence KnappThis year's buzziest debut lives up to the hype. It's a sliding doors story where the narrative splits into three paths after a mother registers her baby. We follow the lifelong implications of choosing three different names: Gordon, as her abusive husband (also Gordon) demands; the solid and confident Julian; or the wild yet cuddly Bear. The high concept is carried off with flair, in a tender, clear-eyed portrayal of the horrors of domestic violence and joys of family life. The Land in Winter by Andrew MillerUnseasonal reading, but Miller's tale of two young couples in the West Country who get snowed in during the big freeze of 1962-63 has an uncanny beauty and depth. The legacy of the second world war reaches into a present on the brink of seismic change, in a novel that travels into the darkest places of history and the strangest corners of the human mind. The Pretender by Jo HarkinBilled as 'Demon Copperhead meets Wolf Hall', this historical rollercoaster has a charm all of its own. In the chaotic wake of the Wars of the Roses, a farm boy is plucked from obscurity and groomed as the rightful heir to the throne. From Burgundy to Ireland to the paranoid court of Henry VII, Lambert Simnel's coming-of-age journey is wild indeed – but who is he really? A brainy, heartfelt delight. The Emperor of Gladness by Ocean VuongThe follow-up to On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous is a lushly written panorama of unexpected connections and second chances, set in the struggling blue-collar town of East Gladness, Connecticut. Young Hai forges an unlikely friendship with elderly widow Grazina in a tale of precarity, endurance and small joys. Gunk by Saba SamsSams made a name with her spiky stories, Send Nudes; her first novel is an equally fresh and funny portrait of unexpected motherhood and alternative families, as thirtysomething Jules, the manager of a grimy Brighton club, finds herself in a not-quite-love triangle with her useless ex-husband and an unconventional young woman called Nim. Raw, tender and unusual. The Proof of My Innocence by Jonathan CoeCoe has enormous fun with a cosy crime spoof set against the strange days of Liz Truss's time as PM. The mysteries – about a sinister rightwing thinktank, and a cult novelist – extend back to the 80s, in a book fuelled with bittersweet nostalgia as well as righteous contemporary anger. The Benefactors by Wendy ErskineThis polyphonic portrait of class, power and social exclusion in Northern Ireland – the debut novel from an award-winning short story writer – is centred on the assault of a teenage girl, and the reactions of the boys' parents. Erskine is a nimble, prodigiously talented author: funny and brutal by turns, with an extraordinary immediacy. Our Evenings by Alan HollinghurstSweeping yet intimate, Hollinghurst's seventh novel becomes a bravura history of English gay life from the 60s through to the pandemic, as it follows Dave Win from his schooldays, an outsider in a world of privilege, through an acting career and into late-life contentment. The Latehomecomer: Essential Stories by Mavis GallantA vital introduction to one of the greatest short-story writers, selected by Tessa Hadley. Canadian Gallant was a sharp-eyed observer of the migrations of the 20th century, imbuing her tales of ordinary people caught up in the tides of history with merciless comedy and flinty compassion. The Tiger's Share by Keshava GuhaA novel of ideas crossed with a juicy family saga, this state-of-the-nation snapshot of contemporary India wittily anatomises the battle for resources – environmental, financial, social – in a clash between ambitious daughters and complacent sons. Perfection by Vincenzo Latronico, translated by Sophie HughesAn expat couple, digital nomads in a rapidly gentrifying Berlin, meticulously curate their lives – from recipes to LPs, houseplants to sex parties. But meaning and happiness remain stubbornly out of reach … A cool indictment of modern emptiness and global anomie; shortlisted for the International Booker. The Death of Us by Abigail DeanA horrific home invasion breaks open the cracks in a couple's relationship. Decades later, their attacker is caught and they must finally face up to the repercussions of that night. A crisply written, slow-burn psychological thriller from a crime writer at the peak of her powers. Audition by Katie KitamuraThis daring, riddling novel hinges on the relationship between a successful New York actor and a man young enough to be her son. It's a literary hall of mirrors that explores the deepest questions about performance, identity and how we relate to each other. Consider Yourself Kissed by Jessica StanleyAustralian Coralie falls for single dad Adam and they make a perfectly imperfect life together. So why, a decade on, does she feel so lost? This relatable romcom explores what happens after the happy ever after (who gets the home office, and who does the childcare). Clever, funny, politically aware and full of literary in-jokes. We Do Not Part by Han Kang, translated by e yaewon and Paige MorrisAn investigation into historical atrocity from the Korean Nobel laureate and author of The Vegetarian. Kyungha travels to Jeju Island, answering a cry for help from an old friend; there, in an uncanny snow-filled landscape, a buried story comes into the light. A strange, beautiful and vital work. Fundamentally by Nussaibah YounisShortlisted for the Women's prize, this daring blackly comic debut follows a British academic who goes to work for the UN in Iraq, rehabilitating Islamic State brides – including bolshie east Londoner Sara, who joined IS at 15, and reminds her irresistibly of her younger self. A smart, informed critique of the hypocrisies of international aid that's also jampacked with action and jokes. Open, Heaven by Seán Hewitt The poet and memoirist's debut novel is an achingly beautiful story of first love in the English countryside, recalled 20 years on. Sensitive teenager James falls for enigmatic Luke, but are his feelings requited? Lyrical, atmospheric and transporting. Men in Love by Irvine WelshWelsh pays another visit to Renton, Sick Boy, Spud and Begbie, now scattered across Edinburgh, London, Amsterdam and Paris in the wake of the double-crossing drug deal that closed Trainspotting. These are the post-heroin years, chasing romance, dance culture and material success, as the 90s dawn and a new era begins. Out on 24 July. Spent by Alison BechdelA new graphic novel from the author of Fun Home is always a joy. Spent finds Alison in midlife, running a pygmy goat sanctuary in Vermont with her wife, Holly, and considering late capitalism, evolving sexual etiquette, ethical living and her own privilege in a country on the verge of civil war. Every One Still Here by Liadan Ní ChuinnThere's excitement building around this young writer from the north of Ireland, whose debut collection comes out in mid-July. Ranging from the generational trauma of the Troubles to medical students' first dissection, the stories are scrupulous, surprising and entirely gripping. The arrival of a stunning new voice. Endling by Maria RevaA maverick scientist obsessed with rare snails, a marriage industry offering submissive brides for wealthy westerners, a country on the brink of war. Following an excellent short-story collection set in 1980s Soviet Ukraine, the Ukrainian-born Canadian writer comes right up to the minute with a fierce and funny road-trip novel which is – literally – interrupted by Russia's invasion. Careless People by Sarah Wynn-WilliamsAs a senior adviser at Facebook, Wynn-Williams saw how its leaders operated at close quarters, wielding influence at home and sowing chaos abroad. Meta has called her account a 'false and defamatory book [that] should never have been published' – but since it was, readers are in a position to judge for themselves. When the Going Was Good: An Editor's Adventures During the Last Golden Age of Magazines by Graydon CarterAs editor of Vanity Fair while it still had money coming out of its ears, Carter entertained the stars, nurtured great writers and even (occasionally) broke stories. Come for the gossip about Anna Wintour's table manners and Donald Trump's fingers, stay for the finely observed portrait of New York media before the fall. The Memoir, Part One by CherAs she charts her journey from poverty to the brink of superstardom, Cher remains 'as keenly sensitive to her own absurdity as she is to that of others', according to our reviewer. This first instalment of the singer's life story covers her childhood and early success with Sonny Bono. John and Paul: A Love Story in Songs by Ian LeslieThere have been many histories of the Beatles, emphasising splits in the band, coming down on the side of either McCartney's or Lennon's genius. Leslie takes a different approach, focusing on the intense bond between the two lead songwriters. Story of a Murder: The Wives, the Mistress and Dr Crippen by Hallie RubenholdShe was described in contemporary accounts as 'a flashy, faithless shrew'. In reality, she was the blameless victim of a brutal psychopath. Here, Rubenhold, who brought Jack the Ripper's victims to life in The Five, gives Cora Crippen her due. Looking at Women Looking at War by Victoria AmelinaUkrainian novelist Amelina was recording her own wartime experiences – and those of the women around her – when she was killed at the age of 37 by a Russian missile. Our critic described the resulting book as 'an important piece of testimony and a precious, powerful work of literature: a steady beam of light born amid darkness and violence'. Minority Rule by Ash SarkarCampaigner and commentator Sarkar surveys the political landscape and finds the left ailing and unsuccessful amid resurgent populism. Where did it all go wrong? Her analysis calls for progressives to ditch identity politics and unite to topple the right. The Loves of My Life: A Sex Memoir by Edmund WhiteA riotous and raw account of gay sex spanning seven decades, this 'erotic almanac' turned out to be White's final work: he died, aged 85, at the beginning of June. A fitting signoff by onewriter called the 'patron saint of queer literature'. The Golden Throne: The Curse of a King by Christopher de BellaigueImmersing the reader in tales of power and intrigue at the Ottoman court of Suleyman the Magnificent, this propulsive history in novelistic mode has been dubbed by one critic 'Wolf Hall with sultans and eunuchs'. The Age of Diagnosis: Sickness, Health and Why Medicine Has Gone Too Far by Suzanne O'SullivanWhat do you get with a medical diagnosis? Relief? Effective treatment? Or a self-fulfilling prophecy? Neurologist O'Sullivan believes that doctors are casting the diagnostic net too wide, but she approaches her subject with compassion, wisdom and expertise, rather than culture-war carping. The CIA Book Club by Charlie EnglishCan literature bring down totalitarian governments? The CIA thought so, covertly funnelling Orwell, Solzhenitsyn and the occasional Agatha Christie to hungry readers in the Eastern Bloc. English's spy-inflected history makes the case for the political power of literature. Proto: How One Ancient Language Went Global by Laura SpinneyBillions of people now speak languages descended from Proto-Indo-European, once the mother tongue of a small group of nomadic herders on the Eurasian steppe. How did their influence spread so widely? Spinney traces the indelible imprint of their culture and lexicon. Moral Ambition: Stop Wasting Your Talent and Start Making a Difference by Rutger BregmanSo you've been blessed with the skills, self-discipline and means to succeed: what should you do? Don't work for a blue-chip law firm or financial services company, argues Bregman in this blend of manifesto and career manual, which encourages bright young things to use their talent in the service of climate action and human rights. A Different Kind of Power by Jacinda ArdernThe former prime minister of New Zealand navigated sexism, violence and a global pandemic during her time in office, becoming a household name in the process. She shares hard-won lessons on life and politics. Is a River Alive? by Robert MacfarlaneStanding in the middle of a torrent in Ecuador, Macfarlane begins to wonder why we restrict ideas of 'life', and the rights that come with it, to human beings. Nature, he argues, should be afforded the same respect. Children of Radium: A Buried Inheritance by Joe DunthorneNovelist Dunthorne had always believed his family story was one of heroic escape from Nazi persecution. The truth, as he discovers after finally reading his great-grandfather's impenetrable memoir, is far more complicated – and much darker. The Illegals: Russia's Most Audacious Spies and the Plot to Infiltrate the West by Shaun WalkerGovernments usually know about the foreign spies in our midst – attached to embassies, with diplomatic cover stories, their existence is a mutually agreed on open secret. But there's another category – those who go deep underground, mingling with civilians and fooling everyone around them. Guardian reporter Walker tells their stories. The Heart-Shaped Tin: Love, Loss and Kitchen Objects by Bee WilsonWhen her husband left her, Wilson found herself surrounded by objects that reminded her of their life together, including the heart-shaped tin she used to bake their wedding cake. This is the jumping off point for a moving meditation on the role household items – 'kitchenalia' – play in our lives. No Straight Road Takes You There: Essays for Uneven Terrain by Rebecca SolnitIn an inspiring series of essays, activist and author Solnit addresses the question of how to avoid despair, and keep engaged, in a world that seems to be stumbling from crisis to catastrophe. Electric Spark: The Enigma of Muriel Spark by Frances WilsonA new biography of the singular writer examines her life up until the publication of her first novel at the age of 39, shedding light on her abusive marriage, the 'abandonment' of her son, and her religious conversion. Homework by Geoff DyerDyer, author of The Last Days of Roger Federer, returns with a wry but loving homage to small-town 60s and 70s England, conker fights and all. Murderland: Crime and Bloodlust in the Time of Serial Killers by Caroline FraserWhy has the Pacific Northwest been home to so many murderers, from Ted Bundy to the Green River Killer? The author of Prairie Fires weaves a different kind of true-crime narrative, in which the industrial history of the region plays a pivotal role. I Regret Almost Everything by Keith McNallyThe founder of Balthazar and a slew of other taste-making restaurants blundered into his job as a New York busboy after just two weeks of trying to make it as a film-maker, and the rest is culinary history. From serving Patti Smith and Ingrid Bergman to hanging out with Lorne Michaels and Oliver Sacks, all New York life is here. We Were There by Lanre BakareIn this acclaimed cultural history of 1970s and 80s Britain, Guardian journalist Bakare uncovers lesser-known stories of Black life and activism outside London. Ocean: Earth's Last Wilderness by David Attenborough and Colin ButfieldBritain's greatest naturalist teams up with producer and environmentalist Butfield for a lavishly photographed and scientifically rigorous look at how life in the seas is being affected by climate change. Matriarch by Tina KnowlesBeyoncé's mother has been intimately involved with her daughter's work, designing outfits for Destiny's Child and helping craft her solo image. But she has a story of her own to tell, of a family shaped by the legacy of slavery and a hardscrabble childhood in 1950s Texas. Intermezzo by Sally RooneyRooney's fourth novel takes us inside the minds of two very different brothers, a worldly-wise lawyer and a shy young chess prodigy, as they navigate bereavement and romance. A tender, thoughtful page-turner about the meaning of life. James by Percival EverettEverett retells the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn from the point of view of the enslaved character Jim, exploring the silences and erasures of Mark Twain's problematic classic in a rollicking adventure that combines philosophical profundity with bitter black comedy. All Fours by Miranda JulyThis playful, no-holds-barred account of one woman wrestling with – and newly energised by – the life-upending changes of menopause has become a phenomenon. It's provocative, mind-expanding and always surprising. You Are Here by David NichollsTwo mismatched, disappointed midlifers; a hike across the Lake District; a tentative romance that is warmly hilarious but never sentimental. Pure pleasure in a paperback. The Safekeep by Yael van der WoudenIn the wake of the second world war, in the quiet Dutch countryside, repressed Isabel finds her beliefs and desires turned inside out. Shortlisted for the Booker and winner of the Women's prize, this striking debut is a measured excavation of 20th-century horrors as well as a subtle family saga and intense queer love story. The Secret Public by Jon Savage: How LGBTQ Resistance Shaped Popular Culture (1955–1979)Savage, a veteran chronicler of music culture, charts the slow but steady emergence of the queer sensibility in pop from Little Richard to David Bowie and Donna Summer, showing how it helped pave the way for social and political liberation. Broken Threads: A Family From Empire to Independence by Mishal HusainThe personal is geopolitical for the former Today programme presenter, who uses her own remarkable family as a lens through which to view the partition of India. Maurice and Maralyn by Sophie ElmhirstWhat happens to a marriage when the couple are forced to spend 118 days adrift in the ocean after a terrifying incident involving a whale? Elmhirst's Nero-prize winning true story asks deep questions about our capacity for hope and resilience. The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness by Jonathan HaidtIn his urgent warning about the damaging effects of smartphones on the lives of children and teenagers psychologist Haidt analyses the evidence and offers advice for concerned parents. Question 7 by Richard FlanaganFlanagan's uncategorisable fusion of memoir and history tackles physics, war, childhood and environmental change – with a riveting near-death narrative thrown into the mix. A deserving winner of last year's Baillie Gifford prize. Recommended by Imogen Russell Williams Mouse by the Sea by Alice Melvin This gorgeous 4+ picture book is full of seaside delights – ice-creams, dunes and rock pool treasure hunts – with flaps to lift and a nature guide at the back. Pandora in Puzzlevale: The Secret Town by Paul Duffield, Poqu and Siobhan McKenna Puzzle lovers of 7 or 8+ will devour this brainteasing, interactive story, helping Pandora solve riddles to track down her missing parents and uncover the mysteries of Puzzlevale itself. Naeli and the Secret Song by Jasbinder Bilan After losing her mother, Naeli leaves India to find her father with only a ticket to England, his name and her beloved violin. Her quest takes her from Hyderabad to a remote Northumberland farm, plunging her deep into a devious family plot in this absorbing, atmospheric 8+ historical adventure. Paddock Grove: A Pony to Own by JP Rose Winning a scholarship to Paddock Grove equestrian school is George's dream come true. But when her parents surprise her with scruffy, naughty pony Bear, it turns into a nightmare, especially when the other students make fun of them. Will George and Bear ever learn to trust each other and work together? A joyously satisfying pony book, first in a new 8+ series (out 3 July). Shadow Thieves by Peter Burns In an alternative London, Tom picks pockets to stay out of the workhouse – until his friends are caught, and a stranger offers him the chance to free them by joining an elite school for thieves. Can Tom adapt to his new milieu, save his friends and ward off the dangers threatening the school? This high-octane, fast-paced debut will be impossible to put down, especially for 9+ Skandar fans. Grimstink by Daniel Peak When alien warrior Grimstink arrives to annihilate life on Earth, 13-year-old Layla Tenby gets displaced to the planet he's just left. She's trying to dodge deathbots while Grimstink battles traffic wardens, the Subway ordering system and being hero-worshipped by Layla's younger brother. Is this the end of everything or the start of a beautiful friendship? An outrageously funny 9+ sci-fi caper by a Bafta-winning author (out 10 July). Kill Creatures by Rory Power Last summer, Nan's three best friends were lost, presumed drowned. Their fading tourist town has been in mourning ever since. Now, a year on, one of the girls has returned – to the joy of everyone but Nan, who killed them in the first place … A tense, enthralling psychological thriller for 14+, by the author of Wilder Girls. Lady's Knight by Amie Kaufman & Meagan Spooner Blacksmith's daughter Gwen knows how to forge a sword – and also how to swing one. When she catches the eye of Lady Isobelle, promised in marriage to the winner of the upcoming tournament, Gwen quickly becomes Sir Gawain – but what will happen when their deception is unmasked? This riotously feminist YA romp is full of heart-fluttering queer romance, bitchy knights and angry dragons. Embrace the Serpent by Sunya Mara After escaping the palace, imperial ward Saphira lies low, letting her new master take credit for her skilled jewel-smithing. When the charismatic Serpent King comes searching for a bride, Saphira strikes a dangerous deal. Trapped in a marriage of convenience, can she ever win her liberty? A wild, intricate, romantic YA fantasy. Run Away With Me by Brian Selznick, Scholastic, £19.99 In 1986, 16-year-old Danny spends the summer in Rome, falling in love for the first time with a boy called Angelo and the many layered histories of the city. Selznick's soft, shaded images and lyrical storytelling combine to create a work of dreamy, poignant beauty. To explore all the books in the Guardian's summer reading list visit Delivery charges may apply.

'A smash hit': The best Contemporary novels out now - Under a Riviera Moon by Helen McGinn, Slags by Emma Jane Unsworth, Favourite Daughter by Morgan Dick
'A smash hit': The best Contemporary novels out now - Under a Riviera Moon by Helen McGinn, Slags by Emma Jane Unsworth, Favourite Daughter by Morgan Dick

Daily Mail​

time13-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

'A smash hit': The best Contemporary novels out now - Under a Riviera Moon by Helen McGinn, Slags by Emma Jane Unsworth, Favourite Daughter by Morgan Dick

Under a Riviera Moon by Helen McGinn (Boldwood £9.99, 272pp) This deliciously romantic story set in Paris and Cannes is perfect to curl up with on a sunny afternoon. After years of infertility which ended her marriage, Maggie is distraught to discover that not only is her ex engaged but his fiancee is pregnant. Heartbroken, Maggie takes up her mother's offer of a trip to the South of France to pick up some of her grandmother Elizabeth's things from her best friend, Allegra. American and impossibly glamorous, Allegra talks Maggie through the photos in the box Elizabeth left for her before she fled Paris in 1961. Maggie and Allegra's connection in the present day is contrasted with Allegra and Elizabeth's whirlwind year in the City of Love. It romps along and is brilliant on grabbing opportunities when they appear. Wonderful. Slags by Emma Jane Unsworth (The Borough Press £16.99, 288pp) Former party girl Sarah is in her early 40s, flirting with sobriety, single and bored. Her sister Juliette, a wife and mother, is approaching her 40th birthday, so to celebrate the pair set off on a road trip around Scotland. The narrative alternates between their teenage years and now, exploring what happened to Sarah then and how those events have shaped her present emotional landscape. However, as the trip progresses, Sarah discovers that Juliette's life isn't as glossy as it looks on the outside either. The more demons they exorcise, the better Sarah begins to feel. It's beautifully written and terrific on sisterhood, sex and obsessions. Favourite Daughter by Morgan Dick (Viking £16.99, 352pp) Another story about sisters, this one is hilarious, heart-breaking and utterly original. Mickey and Arlo are half-sisters who share a recently deceased father but have never met. Mickey blames her dad for every ounce of sorrow she has ever experienced; Arlo, who grew up with him and was his carer before his death, couldn't adore him more. Grief-stricken Arlo is horrified to discover her father cut her out of his will before he died. Mickey can't believe it when she's told that his considerable estate is passing to her – on the condition that she attends seven therapy sessions. Arlo is a therapist – guess where Mickey ends up? Fantastic. I think it might be a smash hit.

Slags by Emma Jane Unsworth review
Slags by Emma Jane Unsworth review

The Guardian

time12-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

Slags by Emma Jane Unsworth review

On the first morning of their holiday together in a remote part of Scotland, 42-year-old Sarah convinces her younger sister, Juliette, to clamber on to the roof of their mobile home for a better phone signal. Juliette has three layers of tinfoil wrapped around her limbs and a tinfoil cone hat plonked on her head before she clocks that she's fallen for a prank. It's a pleasing bit of sibling slapstick in Slags, the new novel from Emma Jane Unsworth about desire, dissatisfaction and the ferocious loyalty of sisters. And sisterhood, as Unsworth writes it here, is an unbreakable connection for which no prank antenna is needed. When Sarah takes Juliette on a Highland road trip for her birthday they find themselves revealing secrets and reckoning with their younger selves. Candid and comic, Slags is Thelma & Louise with a campervan and without a clifftop. There are shades of Fleabag, too, in the fractious sisters, the sexual escapades of one countered by the suburban righteousness of the other. The novel focuses on Sarah, with chapters alternating between her teenage self, obsessing over a teacher in a desperately pining first-person confessional, and the adult woman, who puzzles over the percolations of midlife desire (narrated by an older, omniscient authorial voice). The present-day Sarah is single, sardonic, bored with sobriety. She lives in London, where no one seems to party any more and 'everyone was thinking about their gut health, or their crochet, or the state of the economy'. Juliette, by contrast, is married with children, and lives in Manchester. Her husband, Johnnie, is into ice plunges and Andrew Huberman podcasts. Unsworth is especially merciless in her portrait of a particular kind of modern masculinity, captured here in all its absurdity. 'Longevity seemed pointless,' Sarah reflects, 'when you were as tedious as Johnnie.' Johnnie doesn't have much of a role in the novel, but it's often through the minor characters, those merely glanced at in the rear-view mirror, that Unsworth demonstrates the sharpness of her perceptions. Deanna, Sarah and Juliette's mother, for instance, only periodically swings into view. She is a fleeting memory of neglect – abandoning her young daughters on a broken-down train, stumbling into a party humiliatingly drunk – but Unsworth allows her to cast a long shadow. Later, Sarah reflects more forgivingly on her mother's abortive efforts to escape suburban life and 'the stocks of domesticity'. Suburbia, in general, is efficiently demolished here, reduced to 'bin wars, magnolia tree one-upmanship, brick drives, chest freezers, double garages, weedkiller, Chicken Tonight in Le Creuset, Laura Ashley in perpetuity.' Sarah wants none of it, but her job and her life in the city also leave her empty. Unsworth describes how 'late at night, after video calls with the East Coast of America, she often stayed on as a host, alone, in those abandoned Zoom rooms, her own face staring back at her, the glow of the ring-light as hygge as any wood-burning stove, sipping a glass of something moderately alcoholic, feeling a dystopian peace …' It's not quite loneliness, more a beautiful desolation. 'I don't want to sort my life out,' she tells Juliette during a heated drunken argument. When Juliette protests 'But you feel bad', she replies: 'Only sometimes …' One of Sarah's distinguishing qualities is this lack of clarity about what it is that she desires. She belongs, as she explains, to gen X, that 'lost generation', too young to be old, too old to be millennial, sexually liberated and yet still searching for something. Where Unsworth captured the erratic hedonism of twentysomethings in her 2014 novel Animals and the online dysfunctions of thirtysomethings in 2020's Adults, here she plumbs the muddles of midlife. Sarah is a rare female character: she's not a mother, but neither is she full of fraught questions about fertility or menopause. She is, instead, frank about 'getting her rocks off' and the difficulty of how to do that without the aid of drink or drugs. How to contend with sexual desire is a question for the 15-year-old Sarah, too. She shrugs off unhappy sexual encounters, including an experience of indecent exposure, with a swaggering bravado. How that shapes the adult Sarah's attitude to sex is not straightforward, and there's an intelligence in Unsworth's refusal to present clear cause and effect. Comedy, rather than tragedy, is the response she most often prefers. Perhaps this is symptomatic of the Fleabagification of women's stories – where farce somehow feels more truthful than straight-up trauma. Is comedy a deflection or a pragmatic approach to getting on with things in a world of misunderstanding and confusion? Certainly, Slags culminates in a confrontation that is more chaotic than climactic. But this is an undeniably fun read, the levity often lifted by an underlying sense of sympathy, affection and tenderness. Unsworth is riotous, rewarding company. Sign up to Inside Saturday The only way to get a look behind the scenes of the Saturday magazine. Sign up to get the inside story from our top writers as well as all the must-read articles and columns, delivered to your inbox every weekend. after newsletter promotion Slags by Emma Jane Unsworth is published by Borough (£16.99). To support the Guardian, order your copy at Delivery charges may apply.

Emma Jane Unsworth's fizzy story of sisterly rivalry has shades of her TV collaborator Sharon Horgan
Emma Jane Unsworth's fizzy story of sisterly rivalry has shades of her TV collaborator Sharon Horgan

Irish Independent

time08-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Independent

Emma Jane Unsworth's fizzy story of sisterly rivalry has shades of her TV collaborator Sharon Horgan

Slags combines the cheery nostalgia of Derry Girls with the rapid-fire humour of Fleabag Sisterly rivalry has long been a rich literary seam to mine, and for good reason. Take two women in the fullness of their chaotic, complex glory, add in a dark backstory and the ongoing competition that often happens between women that are close. It's been done before, certainly, but Emma Jane Unsworth has taken this dynamic, swept out the clichés and added plenty of fizz and salt to the trope. It's been five years since Unsworth published her third novel, Adults. It was, among other things, a brilliant and observant portrait of one woman and her social media presence. (A raw, yet highly readable memoir on postnatal depression, After The Storm, was published in 2022). In the years since Adults' came out, she has also turned her attention to screenwriting, co-writing the BBC comedy The Outlaws with Stephen Merchant in 2021. Two years later, she was the showrunner for Dreamland, Sharon Horgan's zippy Sky Atlantic comedy. The latter in particular appears to be a particularly fortuitous collaborator; when it comes to the sharp yet fun tone of their work, the two have much in common.

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