Severance

Books like Severance

7
Options
Considered
October 18, 2022
Last
Updated

#1 Exit West

Two young people—the sensuous, fiercely independent Nadia and the sweet, restrained Saeed—meet in a nation that is on the verge of civil war. They start a covert relationship, but the upheaval shaking their city soon isolates them in an early intimacy. They start to hear rumblings about doors until it erupts, turning familiar streets into a patchwork of checkpoints and bomb blasts. These doors can transport individuals far away, but only at great risk and expense. Nadia and Saeed come to the conclusion that they are powerless to stop the violence as it intensifies. They locate a door and enter it, leaving their house and previous life behind.

Exit West portrays these characters as they leave behind their familiar past and enter an unfamiliar and unknown future while attempting to cling to one another, their history, and their very sense of themselves. It recounts a remarkable tale of love, devotion, and courage that is simultaneously entirely of our time and timeless. It is profoundly intimate and incredibly innovative.

#2 Klara And The Sun

From her vantage point inside the store, Klara, an Artificial Friend with exceptional observational skills, keeps a close eye on the actions of those coming in to browse and people walking by on the street outside. While Klara is still certain that a client will soon select her, she is cautioned not to place too much faith in human promises as it becomes possible that her circumstances could change for good.

In Klara and the Sun, Kazuo Ishiguro examines the fast-evolving modern world through the perspective of a memorable narrator to delve into a central query: what is love?

#3 Americanah

When Ifemelu and Obinze leave military-run Nigeria for the West, they are young and in love. Ifemelu is attractive and confident when she leaves for America, but despite her academic excellence, she is forced to confront her first-ever questions about what it means to be black. Quiet, reflective Obinze had intended to go with her, but after 9/11, he was unable to enter America and instead settled into a perilous, illegal existence in London. They rejoin in a modern democratic Nigeria fifteen years later, reigniting their passion for one another and for their country.

Best Quotes from this Book:

#4 On Earth We Re Briefly Gorgeous

A son’s letter to a mother who is unable to read is found in the book On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous. The letter, which is written while the speaker, Little Dog, is in his late twenties, provides a window into aspects of his life that his mother has never known while revealing an amazing revelation about a family history that began before he was even born and has its roots in Vietnam. It is both a brutally honest examination of race, class, and manhood and a witness to the complicated yet unmistakable love between a single mum and her kid.

As we are enmeshed in addiction, violence, and trauma and ask questions that are fundamental to our American moment, questions that are supported by compassion and kindness, Both the power of speaking one’s own tale and the deafening quiet of not being heard are major themes in On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous.

#5 Pachinko

Teenage Sunja, the beloved daughter of a disabled fisherman, falls in love with a rich stranger at a beach close to her house in Korea in the early 1900s. He makes a lot of promises, but she rejects his advances when she learns she’s pregnant and that her lover is married. Instead, she accepts a marriage proposal from a kind, frail clergyman who is passing through town while traveling to Japan. But by leaving her house and rejecting her son’s wealthy father, she starts a dramatic story that will last for many generations.

Pachinko is a beautifully written and incredibly poignant tale of love, devotion, ambition, and sacrifice. Strong, unyielding women, devoted sisters, and sons, fathers shook by moral crisis, and others Lee’s complex and passionate characters survive and thrive against the uncaring arc of history in everything from bustling street markets to the halls of Japan’s finest universities to the pachinko parlors of the criminal underworld.

#6 Last Exit To Brooklyn

The controversial masterwork Last Exit to Brooklyn by Hubert Selby Jr. has sparked more discussion than most books. This Penguin Modern Classics edition features an introduction by Trainspotting author Irvine Welsh.

Last Exit to Brooklyn portrays the experiences of New Yorkers. They constantly deal with the darkest excesses of human nature and have been characterized by various reviewers as hellish and obscene. But even in these tumultuous lives, there are exquisitely lovely moments. These fascinating characters include Harry, the strike leader who hides his actual wants behind a sexist macho, Tralala, the cunning prostitute who explores the depths of sexual depravity, and Georgette, the transsexual who falls in love with a heartless hoodlum.

#7 To Sleep In A Sea Of Stars

Kira Navárez fantasized about living in alien worlds. She has now awoken from a nightmare. Kira discovers an alien artifact while conducting a normal reconnaissance mission on an uncolonized planet. She is initially thrilled, but when the ancient dust surrounding her starts to move, her joy quickly turns to horror.

Kira embarks on a galactic voyage of exploration and transformation as conflict breaks out among the stars. She had no idea what to expect from the first encounter, and subsequent occurrences test the very boundaries of what it is to be human. Kira is dealing with her own tragedies as Earth and its colonies are on the verge of extinction. Now, Kira might be the last and best hope for humanity.