Ben East 

In brief: Insurrecto; Turbulence; Son of Mine – reviews

A complex but entertaining novel about a US massacre in the Philippines, and David Szalay’s magnificent criss-crossing tale of people in transit
  
  

‘The conceit works brilliantly’: David Szalay, author of Turbulence
‘The conceit works brilliantly’: David Szalay, author of Turbulence. Photograph: Murdo MacLeod/The Guardian

Insurrecto

Gina Apostol
Soho Press, £12.99, pp336

There’s a telling line in the acknowledgments to Gina Apostol’s complex though entertaining novel. “Is it a mystery, a history, a dirge, a comedy, why the hell is it all of the above?” she writes. Quite. Trying to explain its bizarre brilliance is tricky, but essentially it tracks American film-maker Chiara and translator Magsalin as they try and make sense of a 1901 atrocity committed by US soldiers on Samar, an island in the Philippines. The pair go on a road trip, pick up fragments of stories and write their own versions of the massacre in non-sequential chapters. The truth about the awful event isn’t as important as the fact it has been recognised.

Turbulence

David Szalay
Vintage, £7.99, pp144 (paperback)

Like the structure of Szalay’s Man Booker prize-shortlisted All That Man Is, Turbulence was conceived as a “continuous thing”, rather than a collection of short stories, and here the conceit works brilliantly, with each tale carrying on from the last, interconnected by characters on a journey somewhere. The transitory nature of modern life is captured magnificently, building into a fine meditation on 21st-century anxiety.

Son of Mine

Peter Papathanasiou
Salt, £12.99, pp320

Aged 24, Peter Papathanasiou was summoned to his mother’s bedroom and told he was adopted. This kickstarts a search for identity that echoes across decades and continents as the author moves between his mother’s life in Greece and Australia. Though this is a unique family history, there’s something universal about this affecting memoir, particularly when Papathanasiou becomes a parent himself. The writing is graceful but never portentous, filling this debut with heart and meaning.

To order Insurrecto, Turbulence or Son of Mine go to guardianbookshop.com or call 0330 333 6846. Free UK p&p over £15, online orders only. Phone orders min p&p of £1.99

 

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