Marisa, 32, heads creative strategy at a Madrid ad agency and treats working life with ambivalence, claiming she only comes in to lower the air-conditioning bill and passing time by trolling dismal YouTube videos. She masks deeper pain, insists no one knows who she really is, and subverts a team-building retreat in a perversely effective way that exposes sharp insights into modern workplace dynamics and vivid characters. A collection set mainly in Beijing and Shenyang blends urban grittiness with surreal strangeness — sleeping ambulance passengers, abrupt shifts from stalking to violence, remade classics and recurring motifs — while a separate narrative traces 20th-century Romanian history around a boy named Samuel with epic breadth and fairytale lightness.
Discontent by Beatriz Serrano, translated by Mara Faye Lethem (Harvill Secker, 14.99) Ambivalence towards working life is the subject of this tremendously entertaining debut novel. I only come into the office to lower my air-conditioning bill, says 32-year-old Marisa. She's head of creative strategy in a Madrid ad agency. That's a big deal, says a friend. No, Marisa replies, it just sounds like one. She kills time between projects by posting trolling comments on dismal YouTube videos.
Eventually she faces the worst horror of all: a team-building retreat, which she ends up dealing with in a masterfully perverse way. There's pain underlying her quips (No one knows who I really am), but her story is peppered with pithy insights into the modern workplace, and plenty of vivid characters, such as the friend who's had work done. I'm filled with plastic, she tells Marisa. I'm the Atlantic Ocean.
Hunter by Shuang Xuetao, translated by Jeremy Tiang (Granta, 12.99) Set largely in the Chinese cities of Beijing and Shenyang, these diverse stories share a blend of urban grittiness and surreal strangeness. In one, a man accompanies his father in an ambulance to hospital, but finds everyone else including the driver is asleep. In another, a man goes from stalking women to shooting squirrels; elsewhere, we encounter a remake of The Tempest, and a man who claims to be the last survivor from another planet.
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