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Reading: Anna North’s ‘Bathroom Queen’; Jaquira Díaz’s ‘This Is the Solely Kingdom’
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Anna North’s ‘Bathroom Queen’; Jaquira Díaz’s ‘This Is the Solely Kingdom’
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Anna North’s ‘Bathroom Queen’; Jaquira Díaz’s ‘This Is the Solely Kingdom’

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Last updated: October 4, 2025 3:28 am
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Published: October 4, 2025
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Bathroom Queen: A NovelThis Is the Solely Kingdom: A NovelOctober Releases, in Transient

This month, the previous and current collide in homicide investigations in modern-day England and Puerto Rico.


Bathroom Queen: A Novel

Anna North (Bloomsbury Publishing, 288 pp., $28.99, October 2025)



The guide cowl for Bathroom Queen by Anna North.

Bathroom Queen, Anna North’s fourth novel, is many issues: an intricate work of historic fiction, a tightly woven thriller paying homage to the police procedural Bones, and maybe most of all, a transfixing excavation of the competing pursuits converging on the pure world in our current second of ecological devastation, financial precarity, and historic forgetting.

North’s novel is about between two intervals: England in 2018, the place Agnes, an American forensic anthropologist, is working available in the market city of Ludlow to uncover what occurred to a 2,000-year-old corpse lately unearthed from a peat bathroom; and historic Britain, the place a younger druid from the city journeys to Camulodunum (modern-day Colchester), the capital of Roman Britain, and again.

The chapters alternate between the 2 girls’s tales, which every seize a pivotal second within the city’s historical past. The previous takes place throughout “a essential time for the moss” that makes up the bogland, as one environmental activist places it; after years of being harvested for peat, it’s about to be became a housing growth. The latter witnesses the transformation of Celtic society amid the enlargement of the Roman Empire.

North’s prose reveals a real take care of her characters—all absolutely rendered people who’re compelled to confront their blind spots, at the same time as they’re dedicated to their very own causes. Agnes is mesmerized by the bathroom physique, that “uncommon transfigured human being whom it’s [her] privilege to know,” which has an “alchemical high quality … a human being turned to brightness beneath the earth.”

But Agnes can be conscious of “the work she stands athwart with a purpose to do her personal.” When she seems to be upon the bathroom—its layers of peat stripped uncooked—she “has a sense of vicarious ache, like taking a look at a burn or laceration in residing flesh.” As activists attempt to persuade her to go away the dig behind, in order that they will rewild the bathroom, she displays on the local weather disaster: “She has learn the IPCC report, she is aware of the dimensions of what’s attainable …  And but it has all been too massive for her thoughts to carry, her consideration can not discover a place to relaxation, it slides again into what she is aware of properly, a damaged tooth, the fragile treasured goblet of a cranium.”

As Bathroom Queen involves its satisfying finish, it’s clear that, as in one of the best of tales, there are not any simple solutions. Not even the builders or the peat firm, the city’s largest employer, come throughout as villainous. This expansive story is about rather more than a battle amongst scientists, environmentalists, and company pursuits. In confronting questions of obligation, ambition, and group, North’s magical novel renders the world—each historic and fashionable—mysterious to us once more.—Chloe Hadavas


This Is the Solely Kingdom: A Novel

Jaquira Díaz (Algonquin Books, 336 pp., $28, October 2025) 


The book cover for This Is the Only Kingdom
The guide cowl for This Is the Solely Kingdom

Towards the tip of This Is the Solely Kingdom, Jaquira Díaz’s debut novel, one in all her protagonists lastly places the guide’s title into context: “[H]ell wasn’t actual, and heaven was no kingdom,” she thinks, “that is the one kingdom.” It’s the Nineteen Nineties in Puerto Rico, and a Black homosexual man has simply been killed and denied a Catholic funeral.

The dominion identified to Díaz’s characters is the initiatives of Humacao, Puerto Rico. Her multigenerational novel is about in el Caserío Padre Rivera, a spot “folks left … in a police automobile or a physique bag or a celebration, their story everywhere in the native papers.” The group confronts racism, homophobia, poverty, and U.S. imperialism. Within the course of, they flip in opposition to one another.

The novel begins in 1975. Maricarmen and her sister, Loli, are among the many few white youngsters in el Caserío, a largely Black group. Their mom, Blanca, kicks Maricarmen out when she begins relationship a Black boy named Rey. The “wannabe Caserío Robin Hood,” Rey has been out and in of juvenile detention however at all times seems to be out for his neighbors and enchants them together with his musical expertise.

Maricarmen turns into pregnant with a daughter whom she names Nena, and Rey returns to his felony methods and goes on the run from the police. His household should cope with the harrowing penalties of his actions. Maricarmen, by now a highschool dropout, additionally turns into the caregiver for Rey’s a lot youthful brother, Tito.

A decade and a half later, Tito and Nena—who’re like siblings—dwell within the shadows of Maricarmen’s and Rey’s decisions. Each battle to return to phrases with their identities in a hostile surroundings. “Tito was smooth, and she or he beloved him for it,” Díaz writes of Nena. “Nevertheless it was the type of smooth the world wouldn’t settle for, as a result of the world was arduous.”

A tragedy rocks el Caserío, underscoring this hardness and upending Maricarmen’s and Nena’s lives. They transfer to Miami, the place Blanca and Loli had relocated years earlier. Along with patching up familial wounds, Nena should navigate a U.S. highschool the place her friends taunt her for being homosexual and pelt her with ignorant feedback: “I didn’t know they’d Black folks in Puerto Rico.”

The U.S. colonial presence in Puerto Rico is a delicate throughline in This Is the Solely Kingdom. The residents of el Caserío ended up there as a result of “the American authorities didn’t acknowledge” their land titles. Maricarmen works on a pharmaceutical meeting line in Humacao, the place “American factories … lined the air with black smoke, dumping their poisonous waste exterior of the poorest neighborhoods.”

If Nena and her friends study one lesson in the midst of the novel, it’s that they don’t matter to america. “The second they discover out you’re from el Caserío, these gringos need nothing to do with you,” Díaz writes.—Allison Meakem


October Releases, in Transient

Postmodern big Thomas Pynchon returns with Shadow Ticket, a noir that strikes from Nineteen Thirties Wisconsin to a ship stuffed with shadowy figures from interwar Europe. In Hungarian writer Krisztina Toth’s dystopian Eye of the Monkey, translated by Ottilie Mulzet, a doctor-patient love affair isn’t fairly what it appears. Gish Jen crafts a mother-daughter story for the ages in Unhealthy Unhealthy Woman, set between midcentury Shanghai and New York. Booker Prize-winning Georgi Gospodinov’s meditation on grief and fatherhood, Dying and the Gardener, is translated from the Bulgarian by Angela Rodel. In Megha Majumdar’s A Guardian and a Thief, a near-future Kolkata faces famine and local weather extremes.

Norwegian Nobel laureate Jon Fosse embarks on a brand new trilogy with Vaim, translated by Damion Searls. Pulitzer Prize-winning Adam Johnson weds delusion, Polynesian oral historical past, and analysis into the Tuʻi Tonga Empire in The Wayfinder. Catalina Infante Beovic’s debut novel The Cracks We Bear, translated by Michelle Mirabella, revisits post-Pinochet-era Chile. In Sonora Jha’s satirical Intemperance, a divorcée in a U.S. city holds a contest for her hand primarily based on an historic Indian ritual. And Mattia Filice transposes his real-life expertise of operating high-speed trains into fiction in Driver, translated from the French by Jacques Houis.—CH

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