#1 NATIONAL BESTSELLER • WINNER OF THE 2025 GILLER PRIZE • TIME’s 100 Must-Read Books of 2025 • Named a Best Book of 2025 by The Globe and Mail • The New Yorker • CBC • Indigo • Kirkus • Publishers Weekly • Real Simple • The Conversation • The Boston Globe
“[A] cooly observant novel, by a noted short story writer. . . . With dark humour and brief touches of tenderness, Thammavongsa’s tableau of working-class life casts stock elements—a damaged narrator, a workforce composed entirely of nonwhite women—in an alienating glow.” —The New Yorker
“[A] superb debut novel. . . . steady-paced, often mordantly funny, Pick a Colour explores the immigrant experience, the long tail of trauma, the indignities suffered by low-wage workers and their companion emotions: loneliness loss and grief.” —The Wall Street Journal
“In this exquisite novel, intelligence isn’t inherited through education, status, or privilege—it’s earned. With an inimitable style that decentralizes the English language, crackling wit, and profound confidence, author Souvankham Thammavongsa challenges our biases and insists that we never look at a nail salon, or its workers, the same way again. A master of form and restraint, Thammavongsa once again affirms her place as one of the most vital literary voices of our time.” —2025 Giller Prize Jury (Dionne Irving, Loghan Paylor, Deepa Rajagopalan)
“[Thammavongsa’s] language is simple and unpretentious, and this gives it power. . . . A brilliant act of literary subversion. . . . [Pick a Colour] is filled with . . . subtle astute observations of race, class and gender.” —The Winnipeg Free Press
“There’s a depth of power to Pick a Colour, built precisely out of the choices and conceits Thammavongsa has made and constructed; the novel is compact, honed, lean. To use a boxing metaphor, it packs a punch. . . . Thammavongsa shows . . . the bottomless beauty one can find in paying close attention.” —Emily Keeler, The Globe and Mail
“A knockout first novel. . . . Souvankham Thammavongsa’s minimalism draws a cutting distinction between her savvy characters and the vapid customers who seek manicures, pedicures, and facials, flipping scripts on race and class supremacy. The Susans speak truths in a tight, beautiful narrative, striking with a cobra’s coiled energy.” —Hamilton Cain, Time’s 100 Must Read Books of 2025
“A a highly crafted, layered and clever novel.” —The Guardian
“Pick a Colour, the taut, tricksy novel by Laotian-Canadian writer Souvankham Thammavongsa . . . is a feat of economy. . . . Under 200 pages, [it] punches above its weight. Thammavongsa’s minimalism conveys a range of tones and psychological nuances as she grapples with the stubborn prejudices of class.” —The Washington Post
“The definition of small but mighty literature. . . . Through deft writing and humor, Thammavongsa creates a world rich with individuality and understanding for the lives that surround us but that we may not at first see.” —San Francisco Chronicle
“[A] knockout debut. [Pick A Colour] is a slim but immersive novel.” —The Winnipeg Free Press
“This debut novel . . . centres the perspective of Ning—clever, complicated, a former boxer now working as manicurist—to poke holes in the fragile social veneers that hide uneasy truths about privilege, labour and the immigrant experience.” —Toronto Star, Fall Preview
“Pick a Colour spans a single day of commerce, during which menace, joy, generosity, and loneliness take turns filling the room. It is narrated by the salon owner, Ning, whose matter-of-fact, staccato voice belies a delicate vulnerability.” —The Walrus, The Best Books of Fall 2025
“Despite her anonymous exterior . . . [Ning is] an intellectual, a deep thinker and is haunted by the roads not taken.” —CBC, Fall Reading List
“In this quiet but commanding novel, salon owner Ning—a retired boxer—manages the salon with clipped precision while sharing razor-sharp insights and zingers with the other Susans and silently reflecting on her life and losses.” —Chatelaine, Fall 2025 Reading List
“It would be easy to judge this book by its incredible cover. But the insightful depictions of privilege and the service industry inside are even more vibrant. . . . A cracklingly tense novel.” —People Magazine
“Richly observational . . . [Pick a Colour] illuminates a rarely seen slice of life.” —The Times (UK)
“A stylist in a nail salon, Ning is known as ‘Susan’ to her clients; yet a blazing ambition and inner life propel her in Thammavongsa’s slim, gimlet-eyed tale about one woman’s desires in an age of erasure.” —Boston Globe
“A certifiable knockout.” —The Irish Examiner
“Sharply observed and viciously funny.” —Marie Claire (UK)
“A confident, ominous novel.” —W Magazine
“Pick a Color is another example of all the things that make Thammavongsa’s craft shine: its airtight form, soulful characterization, and the evocative portrayal of the mundane. . . . The novel quietly burns with the power of human love and friendship.” —Electric Literature
“With Pick a Colour, her highly anticipated first novel, Souvankham Thammavongsa provides her readers with a singular guide to harrowing truths about class, loneliness, and the art of self-
preservation.” —Literary Review of Canada
“This exceptional novel, honed sharp as cuticle nippers, contains great wit and quick turns, up to the last sentence.” —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“A stunning portrait of a solitary woman. . . . Readers won’t easily forget this deeply intelligent narrative.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Thammavongsa’s novel beautifully demonstrates her knack for developing strong characterizations. Looking at working women, culture, and relationships, the book portrays a diversity of experience that reminds of the common links of the human condition; it also tells a touching and relatable story.” —Library Journal
“A razor-sharp portrait of emotional labor and buried longing, cutting through the polish of a nail salon to reveal the quiet truths beneath. . . . Her mastery lies in what’s left unsaid and in the quiet power of a single, cutting sentence.” —Booklist
“[Pick a Colour] is a sharp dissection of cultural stereotypes and class disparity, as evoked brilliantly—and, it must be said, extremely humorously—in the ironic distance between the privileged patrons of the salon and much more savvy and perceptive employees.” —Quill and Quire
“Only as masterful an ironist as Souvankham Thammavongsa could have pulled this off: a work of urgent and impassioned solidarity that is also a defiant, even pugnacious, assertion of narrative autonomy and technical control. Pick a Colour is a knockout: every punch lands.” —Eleanor Catton, Booker Prize-winning author of The Luminaries
“Pick a Colour is one of the greatest novels I have ever read. In alchemical and captivating prose, this book orbits the steady flows of power and projection that exist between Ning, her employees and her clients. Love, death, joy, abandonment, deception and lust are all at stake in Susan’s Nail Salon. The world of Pick a Colour is shockingly intimate. Reading this book left me with an intense desire to touch a stranger's hands.” —Rita Bullwinkel, Pulitzer Prize finalist author of Headshot
“Pick a Colour is a wickedly funny and moving novel by a superbly stylish writer. This is a book about intimacy and alienation, how othering limits our gaze, about the masks we wear, the instincts we hone, and the ways in which we are nonetheless created anew in each encounter. In a world so often drained of ethics and meaning, Souvankham narrows in on the contemporary rituals of our modern day confessionals—and I couldn’t help but feel her narrator is a high priestess for this moment.” —Avni Doshi, Booker Prize shortlisted author of Burnt Sugar
“This debut novel is a must for fans (like me) of Thammavongsa’s intimate, deliciously tricky short stories. With dry humour and a keen eye for class, she’s given us a hauntingly good book about the dignity and despair of work: the secret life of nail salons.” —Ed Park, Pulitzer Prize finalist author of Same Bed Different Dreams
“Tender and intimate yet tense from beginning to end with its blow-by-blow immediacy, Pick a Colour subverts the comforting mundane. Souvankham Thammavongsa’s characters speak to us through the cracks of power hierarchies to elucidate the ordinary potential for violence buzzing under a thin veneer of normal society.” —Pitchaya Sudbanthad, author of Bangkok Wakes to Rain