An irresistible and poignant novel about the upper echelons of Berlin society, a grand literary celebration, and the after-party that upends the night and carries a group of guests deeper into the city
Naema, an elderly princess dedicated to her pet causes, is in a bind: struck by a malady that maroons her in Montreux, sheβs unable to host an exclusive gala dinner in Berlin to honor the author Masud al-Huzeil for his lifetime achievement in Arabic literature. Not only is she unable to attend, RSVPs have been slow to materialize, and sheβs reduced to begging the ancient award winner to find some attendees at the last minute. Masud invites his old friend Demian, a native Berliner, who in turn invites his two best friends: the troubled innocent Livia and an American publisher, Toto, who will do anything for a free meal.
But Toto doesnβt come alone. In tow are his younger Internet dateβsheβs stood him up often enough to be nicknamed βthe Flakeββand Demianβs fifteen-year-old daughter, Nicole. Not to mention the cop whoβs been trailing Nicole since she left the red-light district. Presiding over the affair is Naemaβs infinitely rich, endlessly disaffected grandson, Prince Radi, whose pass at Nicole culminates in an epic midnight food run that changes all their lives.
With sophistication and tenderness, Nell Zink weaves a vividly colored tapestry of a milieu at odds with itself, taking her trademark ambiguity, daring, and humor to new heights.
βTo stay out late in Zinkβs world, loitering, is a pleasure. . . . Her voice is cool and fastidious, but she has a screwball qualityβa comic sensibility rooted in pain. She grinds her own sophisticated colors as a writer; her ironies are finely tuned; she is uniquely alert to the absurdities of human conduct.β
βDwight Garner, The New York Times Book Review
βThis sly, sprightly novel provides a distraction from the news while the news is all over it. . . . One of the pleasures of Sister Europe is that itβs thoroughly up-to-date but still shaped in the timeless way of Wodehousian comedy of errors.β
βSam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal
βPicaresque, amusing, and brisk, this is a worldly hangout novel of 21st-century manners.β
βVogue, βThe Best Books of 2025βA Previewβ
βZink is one of the most humane writers weβve got, and one of the best. . . . As ever, Zink is funny in a way that requires careful observation and precision. . . . The night narrated here feels like the kind of time outside of time in which classical comedies take placeβa liminal space in which characters experience transformations impossible in the everyday world. Here, some characters find each other, some find their way home, and some get a bit closer to finding themselves.β
βKirkus Review, starred
βZink cleverly and expertly combines hilarious scenes with razor-sharp observations on culture, Americans in Europe, literature in the Middle East, sexuality, and the heavy hand of history.β
βLibrary Journal, starred
NELL ZINK grew up in the Tidewater region of Virginia. She did a variety of service and administrative jobs before becoming a professional novelist at age fifty. Before then, her publications were confined to an indie rock fanzine and short-lived blog, both titled Animal Review. Her books to date include The Wallcreeper, Mislaid, Private Novelist (two novellas written for her friend Avner Shats), Nicotine, Doxology, and Avalon. Three of her books became New York Times Notable Books, and one was longlisted for the National Book Award. Her writing has appeared in n+1, Granta, and Harperβs Magazine. In 2022, she served as the Friedrich DΓΌrrenmatt Guest Professor for World Literature at the University of Bern, Switzerland. She lives near Berlin.
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