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Jo Hamya

Author of Three Rooms

2 Works 91 Members 5 Reviews

Works by Jo Hamya

Three Rooms (2021) 88 copies
The Hypocrite (2024) 3 copies

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I wish I had more empathy for the disaffected character of this book, blurbed enthusiastically by [a:Olivia Laing|4463840|Olivia Laing|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1625056139p2/4463840.jpg] and [a:Claire-Louise Bennett|6431820|Claire-Louise Bennett|https://s.gr-assets.com/assets/nophoto/user/u_50x66-632230dc9882b4352d753eedf9396530.png], two favorite authors of mine. The references to [a:Virginia Woolf|6765|Virginia Woolf|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1419596619p2/6765.jpg]'s [b:A Room of One's Own|18521|A Room of One's Own|Virginia Woolf|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1327883012l/18521._SY75_.jpg|1315615] were of interest, but all the admiration I have for the humor and gumption of Woolf's narrator is missing in this woman who seems so resigned to her lot in life. Am I just one of those fogeys who lived and worked from age eighteen, lived independently, and don't see why she can't get it together? Perhaps. The writing is good, pms so resigned to her lot in life. Am I just one of those fogeys who lived and worked from age eighteen, lived independently, and don't see why she can't get it together? Perhaps. The writing is good, particularly the part near the end on the Turners at the Tate.… (more)
 
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featherbooks | 4 other reviews | May 7, 2024 |
Oof. This little book seemed to last eons, and it took me forever to read. I don’t think I can remember every single reason I disliked it. I was hopeful that this would be good because I loved the way she wrote certain details…at first. And then the whole novel became these elaborate descriptions and long paragraphs about spaces (which I probably should’ve expected from a novel with the word “rooms” in the title). And the dialogue was incorporated into these long paragraphs with no sort of format to indicate someone was speaking aloud. The narrator is also formless, which I think was intentional to indicate her own struggle with identity and place. However, it was executed in such a way that I felt drained as if I had sat at a party and listened to someone ramble on for hours who lacks any self-awareness.

I gave it two stars instead of one because I appreciated some of the social commentary, particularly about social media, class, and feminism, but all of the Brexit discussions were lost on me (which is my own fault). I also enjoyed how precise some of her descriptions were.

Overall, it was an exhausting read and definitely launched me into a reading slump.
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victorier | 4 other reviews | Aug 23, 2023 |
I received a copy of this novel from the publisher via NetGalley.

This novel was not for me. I couldn't get past the 'literary' style (e.g. 'I wanted to work with the dichotomy of things: the constant present tense of the house, and the vision I had of myself, unpacked, future perfect'. The narrator concludes that living like that is exhausting - I find reading writing like that exhausting.) Also, the street in Oxford is St Giles, not Giles Street.
 
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pgchuis | 4 other reviews | Aug 18, 2021 |
Interesting debut novel. Riffing off Virginia Woolf's A Room one's Own, but suggesting how that theory is failing the current middle class generation. A room of one's own is unlikely to be the answer in and of itself.

The skeleton of the narrators three rooms of accommodation over a year: in Oxford (doing a short junior academic post), in London (a 'per day' paid job at a shiny magazine, and heading back to her parents house in rural suburbia where the room was never previously hers, and she has no job to go to.

Hamya picks up and turns the political pebbles of the time, including Brexit, the success of the Tories at the polls, wealthy protestors, the low pay of workers across the lower and mid classes.

There is a lot of mundanity observed. And a flat sense of powerlessness in many respects.

The fourth room, and maybe the predominant one, is the one carried in the narrators hand. That oblong light box which bleeds into the world noise to be viewed if not always digested, relevant, true, but increasingly addictive.

A deft debut. I shall certainly watch for her work going forward.
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Caroline_McElwee | 4 other reviews | Jul 29, 2021 |

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Statistics

Works
2
Members
91
Popularity
#204,136
Rating
3.0
Reviews
5
ISBNs
11
Languages
1

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