Showing posts with label #bookreview #hades #aishahzainal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #bookreview #hades #aishahzainal. Show all posts

Hades by Aishah Zainal


I rarely see Hades on my timeline, so discovering it felt like a rare find. For a debut, I think the author did a remarkable job. I personally love her writing style. It feels raw and unfiltered while vividly portraying the underworld of people living below the poverty line in urban areas. Both main characters are antiheroes whose lives revolve around survival and a fragile sense of balance.

Ken, at sixteen, is raised by his single mother who struggles with drug addiction. They move from place to place like nomads while trying to escape the shadow of his abusive father. The violence he experienced left deep trauma for both of them. Maryam, meanwhile, is an underage young mother who relies on her aunt for support. Her own parents fail to provide the care and guidance she needs.

Ken and Maryam are neighbours and attend the same school. Their relationship begins with constant arguments and endless confrontations. Misfortune follows them relentlessly. Their poverty and hardship often become the easiest explanations for their cruelty and harsh behaviour. Anger, blame, suppressed morality, and the quiet resentment toward their circumstances shape their daily struggle to survive. This harsh reality feels exhausting and overwhelming, yet the author captures it very well.

The enemies to friends trope may sound predictable, but in this novel it unfolds in a subtle and metaphorical way. It is no surprise that Hades was longlisted for the Dublin Literary Award in 2024.