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No Pain Like This Body
No Pain Like This Body
Jul 2, 2025 8:27 AM

Author:Harold Sonny Ladoo,Monique Roffey,Damian Salandy

No Pain Like This Body

Brought to you by Penguin.

With an introduction by Monique Roffey - this is her favourite book by a Trinidadian novelist.

Set in the Eastern Caribbean at the beginning of the twentieth century, No Pain Like this Body describes the perilous existence of a poor rice-growing family during the August rainy season. Their struggles to cope with illness, a drunken and unpredictable father, and the violence of the elements end in unbearable loss.

Through vivid, vertiginous prose, and with brilliant economy and originality, Ladoo creates a fearful world of violation and grief, in the face of which even the most despairing efforts to endure stand out as acts of courage.

'A masterpiece of hurt' The New York Times

© Harold Sonny Ladoo 2022 (P) Penguin Audio 2022

Reviews

I have read the book several times and it is my favourite novel written by a Trinidadian novelist hands down. It deserves to be known

—— Monique Roffey , Independent

It is a book whose enduring gift is that someone had the courage to write it, without illusions, beneath a black sky

—— David Chariandry

Rereading this book has given me the gift of seeing it not only as an ode to violence, as it has come to be characterized, but also as a compassionate work by its end. I am indeed in love with this book.

—— Shani Mootoo

Luminous and harrowing

—— Times Literary Supplement

An endearing, joyful tale about finding (and accepting) yourself

—— Good Housekeeping

A poignant and compelling exploration of identity, love and what it means to be a mother. Mika and Penny swept me along on their emotional and unforgettable journey, leaving me uplifted yet bereft when I turned the final page. By turns hilarious and heartbreaking, this is a total joy of a read

—— Holly Miller, author of The Sight of You

Touching and heartfelt ... captures the essence of mothers and daughters, the nuances that make a family, and where we've come from and where we're going. Sharp and brimming with heart, this tender read will have you alternating between laughter and tears (the very best kind) and missing the characters long after the last page. Mika In Real Life is a sheer delight to read

—— Rochelle Weinstein author of This Is Not How It Ends

With the offbeat humour and poignancy of Maria Semple and Kirsty Capes, this has the potential to be a big hit

—— Bookseller, Editor's Choice

Entertaining, funny and uplifting. Exploring identity, motherhood and second chances, it's one of the most life-affirming books to come out of 2022

—— Culturefly

I laughed, I cried and had the worst book hangover when I finished this gorgeous read

—— Red

Mika's story is a beautiful exploration of the bond between mother and child - what we pass along, what we long for, and what we withhold. As Mika rescues herself from a downward spiral of heartbreak and loss, she weaves for us a primer on healing our broken relationships. A must read for anyone who's ever had a mother or been one

—— Annabel Monaghan, author of Nora Goes Off Script

Tender and profound, Emiko Jean's writing had me laughing, crying, and cheering for Mika

—— Lauren Kate, author of By Any Other Name

Bighearted, sometimes bawdy, and always brave, Mika in Real Life explores the inescapable bonds between mothers and daughters, the enduring families by friendship that we make, and the weight of secrets that keep us from creating ourselves. This hilarious, tender, and very real novel is for every human trying to figure it out-basically, all of us

—— Nancy Jooyoun Kim, bestselling author of The Last Story of Mina Lee

A wonderful, life-affirming story about second chances, parenthood and love. By turns tender, funny, and deeply romantic, I was rooting for Mika, Penny and Thomas

—— Lauren Ho, author of Lucie Yi Is Not A Romantic and Last Tang Standing

Buckle up for an emotional rollercoaster ride . . . A genuinely moving read

—— Suitcase Magazine

A poignant coming-of-age story

—— Heromag

A surreal, engrossing meditation on loneliness, womanhood, and what it actually means to have a work-life balance.

—— Ruth Murai , Mother Jones

Takes office toxicity and how we cope to new heights.

—— Fortune

I found myself completely captivated by this novel's unusual and inviting premise and all that it questions and stirs up.

—— Aimee Bender, author of THE PARTICULAR SADNESS OF LEMON CAKE

I loved it. It's incredible. Diary of a Void is joyful, exuberant, and triumphant. It made my heart sing.

—— Claire Oshetsky, author of CHOUETTE

Filled with sly humor and touching intimacy, Diary of a Void builds from its revolutionary premise into a powerfully resonant story of longing and defiance. An absolutely thrilling read - I didn't want to put it down.

—— Claire Stanford, author of HAPPY FOR YOU

In this fictional diary of a pregnant woman, it is the real, rather than the made-up, aspects of society, such as single parenting and discrimination against women in the workplace, that are powerfully depicted.

—— Kyoko Nakajima, author of THE LITTLE HOUSE

Yagi artfully blurs the boundary between truth and lies with this riotous solution to women's workplace challenges.

—— The Washington Post

[A] penetrating look at working life and gender expectations... In a tone perfectly modulated in Boyd and North's translation, Shibata's dry observations and choices are both relatable and humorous...At the heart of the story is Yagi's wry and witty consideration of how one woman, tangled up in a web of deceit, struggles to live a meaningful life through work and her relationships with others.

—— The Japan Times

Charming and funny

—— Crack Magazine
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