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Underground Fugue
Underground Fugue | Margot Singer
1 post | 1 read | 1 to read
Set against the tube bombings in London in 2005, Underground Fugue interweaves the stories of four people dislocated by shock waves of personal loss, political violence, and, ultimately, betrayal. It’s April and Esther has fled New York for London, partly to escape her failing marriage, and partly to care for her dying mother, Lonia. Their lives soon become entwined with their next-door neighbors: Javad, an Iranian neuroscientist, and his college-aged son, Amir, who is drawn to the illicit exploration of the city’s forbidden spaces. As Esther settles into life in London, a friendship develops with Javad. But when terrorists attack the London transit system in July, the chaos that follows both fractures possibilities for the future, and reveals the deep fault lines of the past. With both nuanced clarity and breathtaking grandeur, Margot Singer’s Underground Fugue is an elegant, suspenseful, and deeply powerful debut.
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review
NovelVisits
Underground Fugue | Margot Singer
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Panpan

This was a complicated story of three neighbors in the weeks around the 2008 London bombings. A great premise, but for my taste the author just tried too hard. There were far too many disparate parts for a smooth engaging story. It felt like Singer threw every idea she had into her first book. She should have saved some for another story. My full review: http://www.novelvisits.com/underground-fugue-margot-singer-review/