The Incendiaries

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What to expect

'This debut novel is absolutely electric, something new in the firmament. Everyone should read this book' Garth Greenwell, author of What Belongs to You

'The Incendiaries probes the seductive and dangerous places to which we drift when loss unmoors us. In dazzlingly acrobatic prose, R. O. Kwon explores the lines between faith and fanaticism, passion and violence, the rational and the unknowable'
Celeste Ng, author of Little Fires Everywhere and Everything I Never Told You
'An impressive, assured debut about the hope for personal and political revolution and all the unexpected ways it flickers out. Kwon has vital things to say about the fraught times we live in'
Jenny Offill, author of Dept. of Speculation
'Every explosive requires a fuse. That's R. O. Kwon's novel, a straight, slow-burning fuse. To read her novel is to follow an inexorable flame coming closer and closer to the object it will detonate--the characters, the crime, the story, and, ultimately, the reader'
Viet Thanh Nguyen, author of The Sympathizer and The Refugees
'The Incendiaries is a God-haunted, willful, strange book written with a kind of savage elegance. I've said it before, but now I'll shout it from the rooftops: R. O. Kwon is the real deal'
Lauren Groff, author of Fates and Furies and Florida

Critics Review

  • Fairy-tale quality reminiscent of Donna Tartt’s The Secret History

    New Yorker
  • The Incendiaries is a book of careful feints – the emphases in the story never fall where you expect, but Kwon is always in total control . . . a startlingly assured book by an important new writer

    Guardian, Book of the Day
  • A pulsating, hypnotic debut novel . . . Kwon’s subject is not so much love and betrayal – though both forces are
    presented as elementally destructive – as the power of religion, and the grieving that engulfs those
    who lose faith. She understands what a believer will do to retain her sense of belonging, to never be
    lonely again . . . The Incendiaries packs a disruptive charge, and introduces RO Kwon as a major talent

    Financial Times
  • What an intriguing novel. Told in spare, revealing prose from the three central characters’ points of view, it makes the reader look again at faith, fanaticism and identity

    Daily Mail
  • The debut novel from the Korean-American writer RO Kwon starts with a bomb attack carried out by an
    extremist Christian cult. Will Kendall knows his former girlfriend, Phoebe Lin, was one of the perpetrators; what plays out in this short, sharp tale is the story of why . . . When Phoebe is approached by John Leal, a barefoot preacher who claims to have been a prisoner in a North Korean gulag, she believes he offers the purpose and discipline she has lost. But Will, struggling to come to terms with the loss of his Christian faith, sees through Leal. This triumvirate of flawed characters share the narrative focus as events spiral towards their bloody denouement –
    and Kwon’s spare, scalpel-like writing makes Phoebe’s tumble into Leal’s crazed vision utterly convincing

    The Times
  • R. O. Kwon’s characters leave you unsure of where reality stands in a narrative that is beautifully disorienting. As each retreats further into their own mind, the language becomes more jarring, and the logic harder to follow, in a way that mimics the real-life terror of obsession

    Literary Hub

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