Honey: A Novel

Imani Thompson
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Honey: A Novel

Imani Thompson
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384 PAGESANGLAIS

Info promotionnelle
"Dark, thrilling, and undeniably hot, this novel will leave you gasping for air."
Glamour

"Might be the most-anticipated debut novel of the year thanks in part to its perfect-for-Hollywood premise."
Esquire

"A darkly comic novel about the tricky politics of race, sex, violence, and love. . . . The entertaining (and quietly damning) read you'll need to kick off spring."
ELLE

"Oooh, baby. If there was one book you could judge by a cover, it's Honey. This book is a hot, sweet, and unforgettable ride."
Debutiful

“Thompson debuts with the scintillating tale of a disillusioned Cambridge University PhD student who goes on a killing spree. . . . Thompson adds intriguing layers to the sordid thriller plot, such as accessible descriptions of the complex sociological theories of Saidiya Hartman and Stuart Hall, and the story includes a shocking revelation about the origin of Yrsa’s killer instinct. There’s a staggering level of depth to this pitch-perfect satire.”
Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“A twisted comeuppance story, a campus-life spoof, and a look at the dating-app generation of women negotiating how their desire to be desired might sit with the feminism they treasure. Wow. Think Fleabag channeled by Valerie Solanas.”
Kirkus Reviews

"Yrsa is the most compelling of protagonists: sardonic, fiercely intelligent, and delightfully bad. In Honey, the cast of women are heroes and villains, emotional ballasts and storms, searchers and squares, and take control of the terrible men who inflict traumas both big and small. This novel is rich, hilarious, and shocking, while revealing the suppressed rage and deep sadness that racialized women carry with them as they walk through the world."
—Jen Sookfong Lee, author of The Hunger We Pass Down

"A wonderfully sticky debut, impossible to predict or to forget."
Erin Kelly, author of The House of Mirrors

Honey is a potent and addicting rollercoaster of a read. I’m awed at how deftly Imani Thompson puts sex, blood, and rage on the page. A worryingly relatable, deliciously dark debut—Yrsa serves up the unhinged hot girl homicide I didn’t know I needed.”
Sophie Duker, Comedian and Writer

“Juicy, dark, addictive, and truly clever. Yrsa is the antihero we’ve been waiting for—very few of us could fail to understand her righteous anger, if not her measures."
Silvia Saunders, author of Homesick

“Phenomenal. The voice is utterly singular, the writing is stunning, and it’s just so clever and sharp. It reminded me of Promising Young Woman (except it didn't pull *any* punches) with a touch of Such a Fun Age and Never Saw Me Coming.”
Louise O’Neill, author of Idol

“Wow, basically. It’s a cracking read, crackling with energy and wit, but full of tension and pathos, too. The writing is brilliant and, for a stone-cold killer, Yrsa is a warm and engaging protagonist. A one-sit read.”
—Harriet Tyce, author of A Lesson in Cruelty


“It would feel slightly cheap or easy to call Imani Thompson’s Honey, ‘whip smart’ and ‘wildly entertaining’ because it’s so much more. . . . It’s a hugely talented writer examining power dynamics in various facets of society, the concept of ‘justice’ and to whom it belongs. . . . Honey is a marvel of a novel, a story that breathes beyond its pages, makes you laugh, makes you angry and makes you want to learn in equal measure. It’s a book that quite frankly, should be studied, as should Imani Thompson’s brain, incredible thing that it is.”
Ore Agbaje-Williams, author of The Three of Us

Overall rating: 4.0 / 5 from 3 reviews.

AI Generated Review Summary

Summary topics

Review topics: [paced, house, characters, ride, read, humour, novel].

Review highlights

Reviews

Dark & Humourous

"Yrsa, 23, is working at the university and working towards her PHD with the thesis being on Afro-pessimism. It’s the story of a slave being repeatedly assaulted by an owner that starts Yrsa on her dark path. It’s an ethical dilemma whether or not un-aliving bad people is justifiable. That’s Yrsa’s journey. This is perfect novel for a book club to generate lively discussions. The entire concept is something that is not only dark but taboo. Why isn’t more done to bad people for their transgressions? Why aren’t more people getting away with it? Maybe if there were more Yrsa’s in the world, there would be positive changes. The dark humour in this is very subtle. Imagine being responsible for someone’s death and treating yourself to an ice cream as a reward. Dark and funny. Some of the academia was too intelligent for someone like myself but that’s a reflection of myself as a white, saltine cracker. With the ending, make up your own conclusion."

Brantford N. (4/5)

Slow paced wild ride

"3. 5 Stars Thank you to Penguin Random House Canada and Tandem Collective Global for having me along for this read a long and gifting me the book to be able participate. This cover…. STUNNING. I love it so much. One word title that goes with the cover ✔️. Colour palette, chefs kiss. “A dark, provocative, adrenaline-rush of a novel about a graduate student who murders bad men and justifies it in the name of feminism, by a bold new voice in fiction” 100% sold. This first chapter had me in a chokehold. I was in. Chapter 2, specifically, page 58 pissed me the eff off (see end of review for reason). I liked our kind of slow burn into madness that Yrsa takes us on. Not literally slow but her calm, cool and collected manner and rationalization. And I mean I was basically with her for most of it. Just until she stopped being a vigilante and doing things “for the greater good” and doing it just to do it. We can tell she’s a girls girl for her friends at first, then she went a bit off the rails. I just had an interesting time in her thoughts. So I like her as a character? I think so. I get where she was coming from and do I fault her completely I think not. Do I know the difference between right and wrong yes, does Yrsa? Unclear. No onto the ending. I don’t like the ambiguous endings. My brain has created three different what could have happened and I don’t like it. I like answers not guesses. Would I recommend this read? Oh for sure. I’m lending it to a friend right away for her to read. *I’m sorry but it’s 2026, in what world do we need to reference and give more promotion to HP and TERFs. I think any other describing words for a banquet would have just been fine."

Justine V. (4/5)

Delightful read

"Honey is a dark satire, laugh out loud funny at times. The pace is fast and the main character totally weird and unlikeable yet somehow relatable yet at times she will make you mad. In fact Yrsa who is totally disillusioned with men and life in general is a serial killer and is bent on revenge against men who she deems to be ""bad"". It's a wild ride and one that will have you questioning yourself at times. Buckle up and enjoy the ride, strange though it may be. Imani Thompson has written a strong debut novel and I can't wait to see what she has in store for us next."

Judy1 (4/5)

Q&A

  • Date de publication : May 05, 2026
  • Langue : anglais
  • Nombre de pages : 384
  • Éditeur : McClelland & Stewart
  • ISBN : 9780771029356
  • Dimensions : 5.8" W x 1.29" L x 8.53" H
Imani Thompson is a British writer of Scottish, Irish, and Jamaican heritage. After studying Sociology at Cambridge University, she worked as a bookseller at Daunt Books. Honey is her first novel. She lives in London.

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