Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty
Books

Borderline Fiction by Derek Owusu review – the wintering of a soul

Owusu’s gorgeous book is webbed with longing, pain and queer possibilities

Derek Owusu’s third, beautifully radical novel Borderline Fiction is unsparing in its evocation of a life in schism.

His narrator Marcus speaks in alternating chapters that witness his experiences at 19 and 25 respectively. These two distinct, but equally poetic voices shift and shimmer over time. At 19, Marcus is a personal trainer in North London, cramming down protein-heavy meals and deadlifting to infinity, with cocaine as his constant companion. His love for Adwoa, one of his gym’s clients, is confronting. She scratches at his silence, but he often slips through the cracks of conversations, behind sofas or into club backrooms.

His childhood has many unspoken fractures, from his Ghanaian parents leaving him with a white foster mother, to the strain of navigating this country as a young black working-class boy. He is terrified of becoming his alcoholic dad, who is and is not Anansi, the storytelling spidergod known for his tricks and tenacity. But Marcus survives as best he can – coming up and down as he self-medicates.

At 25, he is a student at the University of Bolton, reading voraciously – but still beset by the churning of a brain not at ease. He yearns for San, a mesmerising woman who might offer him a true love away from the noise. Their engagement with a rich breadth of Pan-African literature, film and politics, affords them opportunities to collide and shine. Still – their conversations dance around the simmering between them.

As Marcus longs to be held, their union might transform his despair. The borders of his reality pulse with anxiety, as he locates the language for living with borderline personality disorder. Owusu’s gorgeous book is webbed with longing, pain and queer possibilities. He depicts the wintering of a soul, looking up at the sun.

Borderline Fiction by Derek Owusu is out now (Canongate, £18.99). You can buy it from the Big Issue shop on bookshop.org, which helps to support Big Issue and independent bookshops.

Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty
Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty

Do you have a story to tell or opinions to share about this? Get in touch and tell us more

Change a vendor’s life this winter.

Buy from your local Big Issue vendor every week – and always take the magazine. It’s how vendors earn with dignity and how we fund our work to end poverty.

You can also support online with a vendor support kit or a magazine subscription. Thank you for standing with Big Issue vendors.

Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty

GIVE A GIFT THAT CHANGES A VENDOR'S LIFE THIS WINTER 🎁

For £36.99, help a vendor stay warm, earn an extra £520, and build a better future.
Grant, vendor

Recommended for you

View all
How will the world look back on the ruin of Gaza?
Gaza

How will the world look back on the ruin of Gaza?

Top 5 female poets chosen by author, anthologist and editor Fiona Waters
Poetry

Top 5 female poets chosen by author, anthologist and editor Fiona Waters

David Bowie's late revival was heroic, in a very English way
Music

David Bowie's late revival was heroic, in a very English way

Bad Bad Girl by Gish Jen review – a redemptive portrait of motherhood
Books

Bad Bad Girl by Gish Jen review – a redemptive portrait of motherhood