Media Reviews
A gorgeous riot against injustice * Guardian *
Huge ambition . . . impressive * Sunday Times *
Yapa writes like a pro * Independent *
Beautifully written. Astonishing * Elle *
Yapa shines in the thickness of the here-and-now, amid the gas, fear, courage and flawed humanity of the street battle, in passages that are cinematic . . . moving * New York Times *
Fast-paced and unflinching . . . As these characters encounter one another in a fog of tear gas and pepper spray, Yapa vividly evokes rage and compassion * New Yorker *
A vital, powerful read, Your Heart is a Muscle the Size of a Fist is an absorbing, multifaceted, acutely hopeful novel * Patrick deWitt, author of The Sisters Brothers, shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize *
A great wrenching beautiful book * Laline Paull, author of The Bees, shortlisted for the Baileys Prize for Fiction *
A symphony of a novel. In the contemporary tradition of Aleksandar Hemon and Philipp Meyer, with echoes of Michael Ondaatje and Arundhati Roy, Yapa strides forward with a literary molotov cocktail to light up the dark * Colum McCann, National Book Award-winning author of Let the Great World Spin *
Your Heart is a Muscle the Size of Fist is an enthralling street-level vision of the 1999 WTO riots, a story visceral, horrifying harrowing, and often heroic. But above all, this book is a full-throated chorus of voices on all sides - protestors, cops, delegates, politicians, and ramblers - as democracy runs headlong into the machinery of global power. Sunil Yapa has achieved something special, a story that is as tragic as it is relevant, as unflinching as it is humane. Watch out * Smith Henderson, author of Fourth of July Creek *
Your Heart is a Muscle the Size of a Fist is a stunningly orchestrated work of narrative power. This novel marshals all the vital forces of our existence - from the domestic to the political - and offers them to the reader with equal doses of compassion and beauty * Dinaw Mengestu, author of All Our Names *
There is nothing to say about Sunil Yapa's debut novel that its wonderful title doesn't already promise - its heart beats and bleeds on every page, in prose so powerful it feels built of muscle and tissue and sinew and sweat. This book is delightfully, forcefully alive, and I feel more alive for having read it * Eleanor Henderson, author of Ten Thousand Saints *
Explosive * Entertainment Weekly *
An achingly compassionate fiction debut * Oprah Magazine *
Yapa's lyrical prose brings the conflicted internal lives of a multitude of characters vividly to the page * Scotsman *
Electrifying . . . will make you think and feel * Good Housekeeping *
As electric a novel as I've ever read * Esquire *
Sunil Yapa is a writer of great compassion * NPR *
Chilling . . . A memorable, pulse-pounding literary experience * Publisher's Weekly *
[A] gripping debut . . . Yapa is a skilled storyteller, revealing just enough about his characters and the direction of his plot to engage his readers, yet effectively building dramatic impact by withholding certain key details. In the style of Colum McCann's Let the Great World Spin, Yapa ties together seemingly disparate characters and narratives through a charged moment in history, showing how it still affects us all in different ways * Booklist *
Yapa's writing is visceral and unsparing. Noteworthy, capital-I Important and a ripping read, his novel will be on many best lists in 2016 * Library Journal (Starred Review) *
A fantastic debut novel . . . What is so enthralling about this novel is its syncopated riff of empathy as the perspective jumps around these participants - some peaceful, some violent, some determined, some incredulous . . . Yapa creates a fluid sense of the riot as it washes over the city. Your Heart is a Muscle the Size of a Fist ultimately does for WTO protests what Norman Mailer's Armies of the Night did for the 1967 March on the Pentagon, gathering that confrontation in competing visions of what happened and what it meant * Ron Charles, Washington Post *
If you're looking for a novel that moves with heat this winter, look no further * Flavorwire *
The energy and sheer humanity of Sunil Yapa's debut will grab you, wrap you in, and won't let you go - and that's just the start of why you're going to love this. Seven characters narrate this charged book, which centers on a protest. It's so layered, you'll finish this wondering how Yapa pulled off what he did * Bustle *
An open-armed love letter to humanity, this glorious novel loops around a burning center encompassing the warmth of parents and the coolness of patriarchy. Your Heart is a Muscle the Size of a Fist will compel you to look and then to witness. 'We are mad with hope' the narrator says early on, and by the end the reader is too * Tiphanie Yanique, author of Land of Love and Drowning *
In this beautifully written, kaleidoscopically shifting novel . . . Yapa penetrates to the human connections and disconnections at play between the lines of history in the era of the global village * Chicago Tribune *
It's not often that a novel takes a fraught event from the recent past, one that most of us only experienced in the flash of the cable news cycle or the static of print headlines, and imbues it with so much heart and soul that we do something we almost never do in the constant crush forward and faster - we pause and reconsider. That is the power of literature. Sunil Yapa's Your Heart is a Muscle the Size of a Fist does just this for the momentous protests of the 1999 World Trade Organization's (WTO) . . . Yapa does a heroic job of journeying into the heart of this complex set of events, illustrating how they grow out of and impact the character's lives. And while the heart may be the size of a fist, here it paradoxically seems to encompass the whole world and all of its citizens, who pulse with its every beat * The Rumpus *
[A] gripping, profoundly humane first novel . . . An absolutely compelling read * Bookpage *
Like magic, Yapa uses this handful of perspectives to create snapshots that allow the reader to imagine who else was there that day and what they were doing, thinking, and feeling . . . I can't imagine a better book to have kicked off my year in reading * Bookriot *
Yapa's melding of fact and fiction, human frailty and geopolitics, is a genuine tour de force, and an exciting literary debut * Seattle Times *
A vital, powerful read, Your Heart is a Muscle the Size of a Fist is an absorbing, multifaceted, acutely hopeful novel * Patrick deWitt, author of The Sisters Brothers, shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize *
A great wrenching beautiful book * Laline Paull, author of The Bees, shortlisted for the Baileys Prize for Fiction *
A symphony of a novel. In the contemporary tradition of Aleksandar Hemon and Philipp Meyer, with echoes of Michael Ondaatje and Arundhati Roy, Yapa strides forward with a literary molotov cocktail to light up the dark * Colum McCann, National Book Award-winning author of Let the Great World Spin *
Your Heart is a Muscle the Size of a Fist is a stunningly orchestrated work of narrative power. This novel marshals all the vital forces of our existence - from the domestic to the political - and offers them to the reader with equal doses of compassion and beauty * Dinaw Mengestu, author of All Our Names *
There is nothing to say about Sunil Yapa's debut novel that its wonderful title doesn't already promise - its heart beats and bleeds on every page, in prose so powerful it feels built of muscle and tissue and sinew and sweat. This book is delightfully, forcefully alive, and I feel more alive for having read it * Eleanor Henderson, author of Ten Thousand Saints *
Your Heart is a Muscle the Size of Fist is an enthralling street-level vision of the 1999 WTO riots, a story visceral, horrifying harrowing, and often heroic. But above all, this book is a full-throated chorus of voices on all sides - protestors, cops, delegates, politicians, and ramblers - as democracy runs headlong into the machinery of global power. Sunil Yapa has achieved something special, a story that is as tragic as it is relevant, as unflinching as it is humane. Watch out * Smith Henderson, author of Fourth of July Creek *