The Passenger Seat
Approaching the wrong person with open hands can be fatal.
Seeking escape from their small-town existence, two teenagers impulsively drive north, with no particular place to go and no particular sense of who is at the wheel.
Adam and Teddy hope to leave boyhood behind, but as the journey progresses their friendship becomes a struggle to prove themselves. When Adam harasses a young couple they meet on the highway it lands them in trouble they cannot run from.
In taut and stylish prose, The Passenger Seat examines how men learn and perform masculinity. Rejecting easy answers, it keeps our eyes trained on the vanishing point where vulnerability edges into violence, alienation into aggression.
About the Author
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Vijay Khurana is a writer and translator. His debut novel, The Passenger Seat, was shortlisted for the 2022 Fitzcarraldo Editions/New Directions/Giramondo Novel Prize, while his short fiction has been recognised by numerous prizes and published in The Guardian, 3:AM Magazine, and NOON, among others. He has also been a presenter on Australian radio station triple j, and in 2014 he published a children’s chapter book, Regal Beagle. |
Praise
‘Vijay Khurana's profound and propulsive The Passenger Seat is a thrilling, terrifying, devastating ride. This perfectly pitched tale of masculinity gone wrong exposes the ways that intimacy can so quickly veer into violence—yet it evades easy moral pronouncements at every turn. Khurana is a brilliant stylist who drives straight toward the heart. I would follow him down any road.’ – Elvia Wilk, author of Death by Landscape
‘This book is simply great—an elegant novel written with disturbing emotional intensity and a sly, judicious sense of contemporary detail.’ – Lauren Oyler, author of Fake Accounts
‘Vijay Khurana writes incredibly succinct and vigorous prose. His stories, always full of insight and depth, shine a light on the most nuanced and ambivalent corners of our lives.’ – Yan Ge, author of Elsewhere
ISBN
9781761153792
Format
Paperback
Cost
$34.99
Pub Date
April 2025
Extent
256pp
Rights
ANZ
Category
Fiction
Themes
Performance. Masculinity. Violence.