7.16.2026

Peaces by Helen Oyeyemi: How I never knew I could love a mongoose this much.

I mean! 

Look, this book floored me. Everyone is always like, have you read Helen Oyeyemi - And I was like, have I? But now I know, of course I had not, because I would have remembered.


In praise of world creation


I don’t know if you noticed yet from my previous post about Library Of Brothel but I love me a bit of parallel world creation. I like it when I can be transported kind of adjacently to a slightly different version of a recognizable world. I love it because you can immediately suspend your disbelief - the same rules apply; everything must check out in context but you are learning the logic of the world as you go. Delicious.


I knew almost immediately that’s where I had landed with Peaces - so exciting and delightful when you don’t expect it! And - oh! the humour! Xavier and Otto are funny and in love and charming. And of course there is a mysterious woman who plays the theramin on their “honeymoon” train trip, with a bizarre and mysterious story that they must unpack. And the villain! Is he a shape-shifter? Is he a ghost? Does he even exist? I frequently had to reread passages in order to kind of, sort of know what was happening. 


Everyone’s backstory is mind-bendingly complex and binds you to them instantly.


Which brings me to…


Arguably the most interesting and charming characters in the novel, are Árpád XXVII and Chela, the mongooses. Chela belongs to Ava Lapoor (the mysterious woman on the train trying to prove her sanity) - or does Chela belong to her? Well, I won’t get into that now, but when we meet her she does.  Árpád belongs to Otto Montague, the narrator of the story and unraveller of the mystery, some would say of his own making. The mongooses are treated like the intelligent and important creatures they are with tempers and senses of humour and problem-solving skills. And when Chela and Árpád meet, let’s just say, they barely part again. It’s so romantic.


The structure of the book is meeting characters, then their backstory which invariably introduces a plot twist and another mystery and/or reveal including letters written to Ava by each character to explain their connection to her story. The language is hyper modern ( with an old-fashioned slant (a postal-sorting train car!). The references are pop-culture (soju milkshakes, Ted Talks, Instagram!) and old timey (pinhole cameras) or magical technology (a slate water wheel for sale in the bazaar that sings alongside you, and highly rare and perfect scrying balls), but funny. As you can see from this awkward sentence, it all is a little bit indescribable. 


Peaces/Pieces


You see the story itself is in pieces being woven together by the characters as it transpires, are they creating the plot with their actions as they move through the story? Well, yes, maybe! But still, you believe and are transported and above all can’t wait to see what happens.


Reading glasses rating of of 5: 👓👓👓👓👓 A genre all to itself: enchanting