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One Hundred Days

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

From one of Australia's most celebrated authors comes a mother-daughter drama exploring the faultlines between love and control.

Shortlisted for the 2022 Miles Franklin Literary Award

One hundred days. It's no time at all, she tells me. But she's not the one waiting.

In a heady whirlwind of independence, lust and defiance, sixteen-year-old Karuna falls pregnant. Not on purpose, but not entirely by accident, either. Incensed, Karuna's mother, already over-protective, confines her to their fourteenth-storey housing-commission flat, to keep her safe from the outside world - and make sure she can't get into any more trouble.

Stuck inside for endless hours, Karuna battles her mother and herself for a sense of power in her own life, as a new life forms and grows within her. As the due date draws ever closer, the question of who will get to raise the baby - who it will call Mum - festers between them.

One Hundred Days is a fractured fairytale exploring the fault lines between love and control. At times tense and claustrophobic, it is nevertheless brimming with humour, warmth and character. It is a magnificent new work from one of Australia's most celebrated writers.

'The tale of mothers and daughters the world over, this is truly fiction at its fiercest. It is a masterpiece, a triumph.' —Maxine Beneba Clarke

'Pung's command as a writer is astonishing, elating. I adore this book.'—Christos Tsiolkas

'One Hundred Days will break your heart and, in the masterful hands of Alice Pung, put it back together. This is a moving, page-turning, emotional rollercoaster of a novel filled with searing observations, humor, and compassion. I absolutely loved it.' —Tracey Lien

'Subtle, difficult, lovely, and gorgeously written.' —Kirkus

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 9, 2023
      In the nuanced latest from Australian writer Pung (Laurinda), a teen mother-to-be reflects on her ill-fated pursuit of freedom in 1980s Melbourne. Karuna Kelly, 16, lives with her unnamed mother and carries on a clandestine relationship with Ray, a slightly older boy who’s also her homework tutor, until she gets pregnant by him. Her mother, a Chinese woman raised in the Philippines, would have disapproved of the relationship if she’d known about it, and reacts by locking Karuna in their apartment to keep her out of more trouble. Karuna’s narration, addressed to her unborn baby, chronicles how her mother was a bridal makeup artist before her parents’ divorce, which prompted her mother’s business to dry up for fear of bad luck, and resulted in their move to public housing. She also reflects on her decision to pursue the educated Ray, who turned her onto the poetry of Walt Whitman. Throughout, Pung effectively channels her protagonist’s restless outlook (“This guy wrote in the same way my mind seemed to meander these days,” Karuna says of Whitman). This is worth checking out. Agent: Clare Forster, Curtis Brown.

    • Books+Publishing

      April 8, 2021
      Is there a right way to love? Karuna feels suffocated by her mother—and her entrapment multiplies when her dad leaves and she’s forced to move away from private school and into council housing in Melbourne’s south east. Somehow, her mother controls her every move, even while working two jobs. Then, when Karuna becomes pregnant at 16, her mother locks her in their 14th-storey flat, with no key and no way out. One Hundred Days is a heartachingly personal story about love, motherhood and the different forms they both take. Alice Pung deftly approaches the colourism present in Asian communities and the confusing reverence that mixed-white children are viewed with, capturing the perplexing doublethink in communities where people maintain a strict adherence to white beauty norms while also sneering at ‘White Ghosts’ (Karuna’s mother’s term for white people). Though not a story explicitly about race, One Hundred Days expertly manoeuvres themes of classism, racism and sexism through the narrative framework of Karuna’s pregnancy. Written in her characteristic first-person direct perspective, Pung’s first novel for adults is a biting exploration of Karuna’s journey as she fights to gain independence from her mother’s suffocating love while learning to be a mother herself. One Hundred Days is a must-read for fans of The Mothers by Brit Bennett and Pizza Girl by Jean Kyoung Frazier. Marina Sano is a bookseller and owner of Amplify Bookstore. Read her interview with Alice Pung about One Hundred Days.

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