Tag Archives: satire

Yellowface

Satirical novel about jealousy, plagiarism and Own Voices in the publishing industry

I know this author from her fantasy series which I first read some years back. She has recently made a stir in the book world with her foray into literary fiction, and I picked this book as my next gardening audiobook to read. By sheer coincidence, my sister bought me a paperback edition for Christmas thinking it would be the kind of thing I would like. She was correct, and it meant that I was able to take a photo rather than just share the audiobook cover.

Photo is of “Yellowface” by Rebecca F. Kuang. The paperback book is sitting to the right of a blue plate with a greenish pancake on it against a brown, woodgrain background. The pancake has a bite taken out of it. The cover is yellow with two eyes and eyebrows looking to the left.

“Yellowface” by Rebecca F. Kuang and narrated by Helen Laser is a satirical novel about a young white writer called June who is friends with Athena, a vastly more successful Asian-American writer. Although their friendship doesn’t appear much closer than acquaintance, after a night out together results in a fatal freak accident, June finds herself in possession of Athena’s next project. What follows is a morally fraught chain of events where June’s newfound success draws more and more criticism.

This is a clever and biting novel that tackles issues of cultural appropriation, plagiarism and how trials by public opinion play out through social media. The story is told in first person from June’s perspective and she is a delightful villain whose capacity for self-delusion is truly remarkable. June’s ambition combined with a lack of any special talent or originality set her up to seize an opportunity that most (but not all) writers would never consider taking. Kuang explores the conversations around these issues smoothly and as a reader, you find yourself filled with both schadenfreude and begrudging empathy as June’s actions snowball. Exactly how this plays out is supported with excerpts from emails and Twitter threads. I particularly enjoyed Kuang’s explorations of the common idea that someone’s success in the literary scene may be because of their ethnicity, rather than despite it. I also really liked how Kuang provided a behind-the-curtain understanding of how things work once you have an agent, a manuscript and a publisher and how much (and how little) authors are supported to sell their work.

A keenly insightful and thoroughly enjoyable book.

2 Comments

Filed under Audiobooks, Book Reviews, General Fiction

Five go on a Strategy Away Day

I got this little book as a Christmas present this year, and I chuckled to myself at the title. Clearly a spoof on Enid Blyton’s “The Famous Five” series, it was a tip of the hat to the fact that since I started my grown up job, I now get to go along to corporate training sessions.

snapchat-567155538.jpg

“Five go on a Strategy Away Day” by Bruno Vincent is one of the new “Enid Blyton for Grownups” satire series that rewrites “The Famous Five” books with the characters now adults dealing with modern issues. George, Dick, Anne, Julian and Timmy the dog have been summoned by the multinational corporation they work for to attend a day of team-building activities to a hotel in the countryside. There their team is put to the test while they compete with other teams, including a particular team made up of seven, to win a prestigious award. However things don’t go as planned, and there seems to be something sinister going on.

This book looks a lot like the “Ladybird Books for Grownups” series that came out a while ago, so I was expecting it to be more of a book full of classic style illustrations with hilarious captions. Instead, it actually was just like an Enid Blyton book. I think there is a lot of nostalgia value to this book, and I think that anyone who works in any kind of big organisation can probably relate to the kind of team dynamics that are explored in this book. Vincent captures the tone and spirit of Blyton’s stories, with a twist of modern sophistication. However, although it’s quite clever, it didn’t quite elicit from me the scandalised giggles that the “Ladybird Books for Grownups” series did.

This would make a good office waiting room coffee table book or a fun Kris Kringle present for a colleague.

Leave a comment

Filed under Book Reviews, Children's Books, Classics, General Fiction