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Edgware Road

"Set in London in the eighties and early noughties, this immersive debut rings with authenticity and the emotional weight of a young woman’s journey to discover her late father. "

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LoveReading Says

LoveReading Says

Taking in two timeframes, Yasmin Cordery Khan’s Edgware Road is an engrossing debut that lays bare the ways we’re haunted by our pasts, and driven to pursue paths that may bring about our downfall.

On one level, Edgware Road tells the tragic story of a man desperate to give his family the best, so caught up in an unattainable dream of unimaginable wealth, that he loses everything that matters. At the same time, it explores long-lasting connections across time and continents. And all this against a backdrop of corrupt business practices that have catastrophic consequences for smaller cogs in the machine.

It’s 1981, and Khalid has big dreams for his future. He works in the West End, determined to attain the wealth displayed by the clients he encounters in the Playboy casino, determined “to be the paymaster. Nothing else in the world could give you authority, and respect”. He’s also married to a beautiful woman and has a daughter, Alia. Always the optimist, when London Playboy is shut down, he’s not worried about losing his job. He’ll take a position with the company in the Bahamas. But alongside this optimism, Khalid is a gambler. He makes bad decisions, his relationship breaks down, he’s in serious debt, and so throws himself into an investment opportunity he's certain will solve all his problems, until his body is found washed-up far from home.

Sliding to 2003 (the narrative masterfully moves between the two timeframes) and Alia, now a Junior English tutor at Oxford University, is drawn to visit her father’s extended family in Karachi to discover what really happened to him.

A gripping family mystery with emotional depth and intriguing social context – Edgware Road is a riveting, smartly-written debut.

The LoveReading LitFest invited Yasmin to the festival to talk about Edgware Road.

The digitally native, all year round, online literature and books festival, with new content released every week is a free-for-all-users festival.

What are you waiting for? Check out a preview of the event and sign up to become a member. 

Joanne Owen

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Reader Reviews

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It’s 1987, and 11 year old Alia Quraishi is waiting for her unreliable father to meet her for a contact visit. But Khalid never arrives, and Alia spends the rest of this gripping novel working out the complex reasons why he's disappeared.

In 1987, 11 year old Alia Quraishi is waiting at Edgeware Road tube station for her unreliable father to meet her for a contact visit. But Khalid never arrives, and Alia spends the rest of this gripping novel working out the complex reasons why.

Her investigations take her from her home in Oxford, across the world to Pakistan and Goa, in search of Khalid's family and friends, whom she hopes might help her make sense of his disappearance and subsequent death. As she does so, she grapples with her own cultural identity, and how the absence of her father has affected her.... Read Full Review

Rachel Elvidge

Enticing writing style that evokes London in the 80s and draws you into the characters and their journey.

I was attracted to the book by the theme of family and identity and the journey of self-discovery.
I was drawn very quickly into the book by the enticing writing style and the evocation of London in the 1980s, a period I remember well – brought alive. The highlight was the development of the characters. I did find some of the background detail a bit of a distraction, but not a significant issue. I was held by the story and wanted to get to the end.
Looking forward to Yasmin’s next book.... Read Full Review

Barbara Gaskell

This is a really strong, evocative debut novel and one which I will certainly be recommending

“Where do you find a lost father? In the mirror, in the sweep of an arched eyebrow, in the sheen of hair?”
Alia is searching for the truth about her father’s death 20 years ago. The book takes us between Alia's life as an academic in Oxford in 2003 and her father Khalid’s life as a croupier in 1980s London.
Khalid is a gambling addict working at the Playboy club but he is keen to move up to the big time.... Read Full Review

Fran Woodrow