The Guardian - World News
| Title | Homebound by Portia Elan review – a Cloud Atlas-like puzzle-box novel | Source | The Guardian - World News |
| Description |
From 1980s Cincinnati into the interstellar darkness, the stories of four women interconnect across the centuries in a gentle hymn to found families This is the kind of book you pitch by analogy: JG Ballard meets Gabrielle Zevin; Isaac Asimov meets Stephen Chbosky; Ready Player One meets Love, Simon (replete with ferris wheel). I’ve been describing it to friends as a YA Kazuo Ishiguro set adrift in Kevin Costner’s Waterworld. It turns out I have two kinds of friends: those who hear that description as praise, and those who heed it as a warning. Novels that demand comparisons rarely survive them. This one does (though it could do without that mawkish ferris wheel). American author Portia Elan’s debut is a gentle hymn to found families – the kin we choose rather than inherit – and it’s fitting that it reads that way, assembled from allegiances. Elan knows what her characters will discover: stories are how we claim one another. Continue reading... |
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| Link | https://www.theguardian.com/books/2026/may/01/homebound-by-portia-elan-review-a-cloud-atlas-like-puzzle-box-novel | Published At | 2026-05-01 08:00:55 (1 month ago) |
| Created At | 2026-05-01 08:16:16 | Updated At | 2026-05-01 08:16:16 |