A rare and timely look at life as a young adult from an immigrant background living in London, based on the author's own experiences of years in flatshares, low paid jobs and encounters with xenophobia. A razor sharp, darkly funny and intimate coming-of-age novel for fans of Naoise Dolan, Dolly Alderton and Louise Nealon.
Ania Bas grew up in Poland and moved to the UK 15 years ago to pursue a career in the arts. She has worked with Tate, Whitechapel Gallery and others as an artist and arts organiser. She began writing Odd Hours on the Faber Academy 'Writing a Novel' course.
'Dark, sharply funny and utterly rewarding ... Reminded me of the
brilliant books by Kirsty Capes ... Highly recommended'
*Liz Hyder*
'This enigmatic and idiosyncratic gem is eccentric, quirky and
utterly original'
*Kevin O'Sullivan (Irish Examiner Book of 2022)*
'Bas writes so well about that state of being young and trying so
hard to make connections'
*Marianne Levy*
'Odd Hours is a brilliant satire on the struggles of life in the
zero-hours sector ... An auspicious debut'
*Paul Mendez*
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |