Hyper

Released 11/1/24, Chatto & Windus

Released 11/1/24 (Swedish), Albert Bonniers Förlag

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Blurbs

A tightly stitched work of melancholy wit and rueful irony that charts the fortunes of one Kurdish family across generations and geolocations. This is an absorbing and satisfying saga, carried by universal emotion, with each of its sibling protagonists in circumstances of increasing desperation, disillusionment, and displacementHyper evokes what it feels like to live now: to surf on or surrender to the mercurial waves of global capital

Tom Benn, author of Oxblood

Ambitious and intricate, panoramic in scope yet alive to the intimate details of everyday existence, Hyper marks the arrival of a significant, keenly perceptive new voice in literature.

Sam Byers, author of Perfidious Albion

Ismaïl destroys the concept of the “international family saga” by feeding it through the 21st-century capitalist shredder. Funny, tender, ultramodern and brilliant.

Ruby Cowling, author of The Paradise

A satire of capitalism, a parable of money, a saga of ‘statelessness’ and diaspora, and a most heartfelt chronicle of fractured families. Delicious, harrowing, gutting, hilarious, and deeply necessary, Hyper is a masterpiece.

Porochista Khakpour, author of Brown Album

Hyper weaves parallel worlds into a broken tapestry of finance, familial disruption and the remnants of internationalist aspirations. Flash crashes briefly illuminate desperate journeys over borders, Dubai malls and the US armoured vehicles of Baghdad. It is not only the best but also the most contemporary novel I’ve read for a long time.

Hito Steyerl

Summary

When Rafiq Kermanj, founder of the Kurdish Communist Party, is forced to flee Tehran for London with his conservative wife Xezal and three children, they suffer the shame of penury and migration layered on Kurdish statelessness.

Agri Ismaïl’s unforgettable debut novel follows the lives of Rafiq’s children and their increasingly desperate relationship to money. Siver, the only daughter, escapes into an unhappy marriage in Baghdad before fleeing to raise her daughter as a single mother in Dubai. Mohammed, the eldest, stays in London to climb the unforgiving ladder of the financial sector. Laika, the youngest, retreats into a contactless digital life, designing the trading algorithms that will ultimately prove his downfall in a condo near Wall Street. The siblings are so distant from one another that they no longer even share the same language: Siver’s world is presented in sparse fragments of contemporary auto-fiction, freely jumping from past to present; Mohammed’s in a hysterical realism reflecting London after the stock market crash; and Laika’s in a kinetic prose that emulates the speed and rhythms of the internet, a new topic always a click away.

At once a love letter to the systems novel and a subversion of the family saga, Hyper uses the unsettled nature of the Kurdish diaspora to capture the dislocations of life under capitalism.