Better Reading Preview: One Day We’re All Going To Die by Elise Esther Hearst

Better Reading Preview: One Day We’re All Going To Die by Elise Esther Hearst

Sorrow and Bliss meets Normal People in this utterly compelling, darkly humorous millennial coming-of-age novel about a 27-year-old single Jewish woman in Melbourne who must learn to reconcile family expectations, cultural constraints and inter-generational trauma with her own desires. A coruscating new voice.

At 27, Naomi is just trying to be a normal person. A normal person who works at the Museum of Jewish Heritage, who cares for lost things, found things, sacred things and her family. A person who finds herself going on bad blind dates, having cringe-worthy sex, a tumultuous, toxic affair, and falling for a man called Moses.

Being a normal person would be easy and fine if she didn’t bear the weight of the unspoken grief of Cookie, her Holocaust-survivor grandmother. It would all be fine if she just knew how to be, without feeling the pull of expectation, the fear of disappointing others (men, friends, her parents, humanity), and that pesky problem of being attracted to all the wrong people (according to her parents, anyway).

By endlessly trying to please everyone around her, Naomi can’t seem to figure out what she wants for herself, or how to get it. With echoes of the dead and dying all about her, in objects, in story, in her grandmother’s firm grasp, Naomi isn’t quite sure she knows how to be a normal person, but she is going to try.

This fiercely honest, funny and fearless novel is a deep dive into the complex questions that surround culture, identity politics and generational trauma in contemporary Australia. Both a sadly affectionate and brilliantly unsparing examination of the glorious, awkward, messiness of life.

We have 100 copies of this book to give away. For your chance to Preview this book, click on the link and fill in the registration form.

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Reviews

An Utterly Compelling Debut: Read Our Review of One Day We’re All Going to Die by Elise Esther Hearst

Review | Our Review

13 September 2023

An Utterly Compelling Debut: Read Our Review of One Day We’re All Going to Die by Elise Esther Hearst

    Your Preview Verdict: One Day We're All Going to Die by Elise Esther Hearst

    Review | Preview

    30 August 2023

    Your Preview Verdict: One Day We're All Going to Die by Elise Esther Hearst

      Publisher details

      One Day We're All Going to Die
      Author
      Elise Esther Hearst
      Publisher
      HQ Fiction
      Genre
      Fiction
      Released
      30 August, 2023
      ISBN
      9781867251279

      Synopsis

      Sorrow and Bliss meets Normal People in this utterly compelling, darkly humorous millennial coming-of-age novel about a 27-year-old single Jewish woman in Melbourne who must learn to reconcile family expectations, cultural constraints and inter-generational trauma with her own desires. A coruscating new voice.

      At 27, Naomi is just trying to be a normal person. A normal person who works at the Museum of Jewish Heritage, who cares for lost things, found things, sacred things and her family. A person who finds herself going on bad blind dates, having cringe-worthy sex, a tumultuous, toxic affair, and falling for a man called Moses.

      Being a normal person would be easy and fine if she didn't bear the weight of the unspoken grief of Cookie, her Holocaust-survivor grandmother. It would all be fine if she just knew how to be, without feeling the pull of expectation, the fear of disappointing others (men, friends, her parents, humanity), and that pesky problem of being attracted to all the wrong people (according to her parents, anyway).

      By endlessly trying to please everyone around her, Naomi can't seem to figure out what she wants for herself, or how to get it. With echoes of the dead and dying all about her, in objects, in story, in her grandmother's firm grasp, Naomi isn't quite sure she knows how to be a normal person, but she is going to try.

      This fiercely honest, funny and fearless novel is a deep dive into the complex questions that surround culture, identity politics and generational trauma in contemporary Australia. Both a sadly affectionate and brilliantly unsparing examination of the glorious, awkward, messiness of life.

      Elise Esther Hearst
      About the author

      Elise Esther Hearst

      Books by Elise Esther Hearst

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      1. Bianca says:

        I can’t register

      2. Irene Penfold says:

        There seems to be something wrong with your registration. I have completed it but it is not registering? Very frustrating🤔