cover image Good Girl

Good Girl

Aria Aber. Hogarth, $29 (368p) ISBN 978-0-593-73111-6

Aber, who won the Whiting Award for her poetry collection, Hard Damage, makes her fiction debut with a stunning coming-of-age story set amid Berlin’s underground art and music scene. Nila, the daughter of Afghan refugees, was born shortly after Germany’s reunification in the city’s “ghetto-heart.” A self-described “small rat,” she grows into a wild child, ashamed of her parents’ poor grasp of the language and of her impoverished immigrant neighborhood, where cobwebs and swastika graffiti adorn the elevators of her building. She invents fictional identities at her all-girls Catholic boarding school, alternately claiming to be Greek, Colombian, or Israeli, and discovers a love for Kafka and photography. At 19, she keeps up her “pathological habit” of lying about her identity with a goup of dance club kids, with whom she takes acid, amphetamines, and ecstasy. She also develops a toxic relationship with Marlowe Woods, 36, a fixture on the techno music scene whose bright early career as a novelist has stalled. Aber casts Nila’s struggle to find herself against a turbulent backdrop of racial tensions, including the murder of Afghan brothers in their bakery, attacks on women in hijabs, and Germans’ xenophobic fear of people with a “southern look.” In the process, Aber offers readers both a piercing look into Nila’s psyche and an acute sense of place. It’s a remarkable achievement. Agent: Bill Clegg, Clegg Agency. (Jan.)