Baxter lives in Brooklyn, New York. Clickbait is her debut novel.
At Electric Lit she tagged ten thrilling books about women on the verge. One title on the list:
Queenie by Candice Carty-WilliamsRead about the other entries on the list.
Queenie isn’t just a deep-dive into one woman’s psychological tics but also a beautiful portrait of London in all its diversity and its downfalls. Carty-Williams, in a very Zadie Smith-esque way, is able to draw attention to a plethora of social issues—gentrification, racism, misogyny, the cruelties of capitalism and the generation effects of immigration—within a few short scenes (the first chapter somehow manages to draw attention to every one of these, while remaining readable and at times heartrending).
Queenie is a protagonist who makes a lot of bad decisions, but you keep rooting for her. Carty-Williams does a good job of showing how unfairly society reacts to her even as she demands Queenie take responsibility for her own “stuff” (as Queenie continually calls it). And she also does a good job of portraying how no one truly comes back together on their own—Queenie’s imperfectly perfect support system often takes center-stage, too.
Queenie is among Lisa Zhuang's eight novels with characters who go to therapy.
--Marshal Zeringue