Wickedly funny and slyly poignant, a very modern satire on cruise ships, crappy jobs and capitalism from the prize-winning author of Supper Club
Ingrid is a gift shop girl. Before that she was an IT technician, and before that a croupier, and before that a nursery nurse. She has worked on an enormous, luxury cruise liner for the past five years and in that time she has done more jobs than she can remember. She isn't good at any of them but she's good at pretending. And the endless maze-like corridors of the ship are the perfect place to forget the life she left behind on land and the person she used to be.
Until the day that Ingrid is selected for the ship's prestigious 'mentorship scheme' - a mysterious initiative run by its captain and self-anointed lifestyle guru, Keith - and slowly but surely things start to go wrong.
Part The Circle, part Convenience Store Woman and part My Year of Rest and Relaxation, The Odyssey is a merciless takedown of modern capitalism and our anxious, ill-fated quests for something to believe in. And as its title suggests, it is a voyage that will eventually lead its unlikely heroine all the way home. Though she'd do almost anything to avoid getting there...
Wickedly funny and slyly poignant, a very modern satire on cruise ships, crappy jobs and capitalism from the prize-winning author of Supper Club
Ingrid is a gift shop girl. Before that she was an IT technician, and before that a croupier, and before that a nursery nurse. She has worked on an enormous, luxury cruise liner for the past five years and in that time she has done more jobs than she can remember. She isn't good at any of them but she's good at pretending. And the endless maze-like corridors of the ship are the perfect place to forget the life she left behind on land and the person she used to be.
Until the day that Ingrid is selected for the ship's prestigious 'mentorship scheme' - a mysterious initiative run by its captain and self-anointed lifestyle guru, Keith - and slowly but surely things start to go wrong.
Part The Circle, part Convenience Store Woman and part My Year of Rest and Relaxation, The Odyssey is a merciless takedown of modern capitalism and our anxious, ill-fated quests for something to believe in. And as its title suggests, it is a voyage that will eventually lead its unlikely heroine all the way home. Though she'd do almost anything to avoid getting there...
Lara Williams is the author of Treats and Supper Club. Treats was shortlisted for the Republic of Consciousness Prize, the Edinburgh First Book Award and the Saboteur Awards and longlisted for the Edge Hill Short Story Prize, and Supper Club won the Guardian 'Not the Booker' Prize, was named as a Book of the Year 2019 by TIME and Vogue, and has been translated into six languages. Lara Williams lives in Manchester and is a contributor to the Guardian, Independent, Times Literary Supplement, Vice, Dazed and others.
This book is a serious vibe and wickedly funny. It's a slyly
poignant satire on cruise ships, crappy jobs and capitalism from
the author of the also-incredible Supper Club
*Cosmopolitan, Best Books to Read in April*
Far from normal... Williams has a deft touch in developing, by the
accretion of small details, a sense of the strangeness of her
characters and their situation - the feeling that the world is
spinning imperceptibly off its axis
*The Times*
This is darkly comic existential fiction at its best, for fans of
Ottessa Moshfegh, Sam Byers and Sayaka Murata... A subversive
satire on consumer capitalism and the millennial search for
meaning
*Culture Whisper*
Williams succeeds in satirising the seemingly unmockable: the
overwhelming absurdities of modern life... There's more than a hint
of a fever dream about the whole affair... Comparisons with Ottessa
Moshfegh's My Year of Rest and Relaxation are unavoidable
*Literary Review*
Lara Williams is the queen of smart modern satire. Sharp and
evocative, funny and dark, The Odyssey captures the joy and the
weirdness of work, travel, ambition, and being a human woman who
wants things. I could read her all day
*Emma Jane Unsworth, author of 'Adults'*
Slyly humorous, sharp, courageous and at times devastating... The
Odyssey is a wildly original satire about the struggle to forge
human connection and the craving for some semblance of order when
one's life has fallen apart. Startlingly unique and beautifully
written
*Frances Cha, author of 'If I Had Your Face'*
Astonishing, subversive and darkly funny - The Odyssey is another
dazzler of a novel from the bold and highly perceptive Lara
Williams
*Zeba Talkhani, author of 'My Past is a Foreign Country'*
Perceptive, enigmatic and thought-provoking - I couldn't put it
down. Wonderful!
*Amelia Horgan, author of 'Lost in Work'*
Mischievous and thought-provoking
*Sheerluxe, Best Books to Read in April*
I have never read anything like this... Deliciously unpredictable,
a testament to Lara Williams' fearlessness in diving into the
absurd, cringeworthy, and downright uncomfortable aspects of
life
*Mateo Askaripour, author of 'Black Buck'*
Lara Williams dissects Ingrid's character layer by layer, building
the story through a series of tantalizing, frequently bizarre
reveals that show exactly how this troubled woman ended up on a
cruise ship that, like her, is falling apart. Readers who enjoy
Melissa Broder and Ottessa Moshfegh will appreciate this surreal
trip through a troubled woman's psyche
*Booklist*
I loved this surreal retelling of the Odyssey set in the
pressure-cooker environment of a cruise ship, the ideal site for
her gripping takedown of workplace culture. Unhinged guru-god-boss
Keith is a chillingly accurate echo of managerial bullshit -
beneath their standard issue tracksuits, his staff vibrate
uncannily with repressed trauma and sexual frustration. Our 'hero'
Ingrid's quest for self-improvement serves as a warning that
however hard you try, finally, you cannot hide from yourself. The
Odyssey is a darkly comic anti-bildungsroman that sends up the idea
of 'professional development' and the profound alienation of the
contemporary workplace
*Rebecca May Johnson, author of 'Small Fires'*
Slender and mysterious, The Odyssey is equal parts satire and
elegy, coming from the very edge of the abyss... It is a book that
demands of the reader just as much as it rewards them with.
Williams is so good at calling attention to the dangerous borders
of our day-to-day lives: the story of a lone woman's yearning [and]
a universal warning against complacency. Unsettling, risk-taking,
profoundly moving - I loved it
*Livia Franchini, author of 'Shelf Life'*
The Odyssey is destined to become a classic of avoidance
literature. With terrific bite, Lara Williams disorients her
protagonist and her readers. Dislocated by the interminable
movement between grime and gloss, the sea and land, we all just
might outwit what we most want to escape
*Amy Key, poet and author*
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |