A quilt in the winter, a fireplace of embers, a singing kettle, a blazing forest, a steaming bath, a controlled burn - what you hold in your hands generates every kind of heat. There is violence, and some of it burns, but its most consistent and miraculous energy - the energy radiating beneath every sentence of every page - is a kind of geothermal tenderness. Jonas Hassen Khemiris The Sisters moves generation to generation, neighbour to neighbour, skin to skin, pulse to pulse. If you welcome this novel into your mind, it will warm and transform you -- Tess Gunty, Waterstones Debut Fiction Prize-winning author of The Rabbit Hutch I try to avoid recommending too many novels whose length could rival a dictionarys. But Ive been thinking about The Sisters ever since I finished it, and now that its out I hope you linger over it, too. -- Joumana Khatib * New York Times * The Sisters is a novel of unsurpassed tenderness. It is about the power of stories, to make and break and finally heal us. Jonas Hassen Khemiri is a born storyteller, of rare and astonishing gifts. Every character - every sentence - is startlingly, indubitably alive -- Katie Kitamura, author of Intimacies The Sisters made such an impression on me that I started dreaming about Ina, Evelyn and Anastasia and the brilliant structure of this capacious, moving novel. It will remain with me for a long time -- Lara Haworth, author of Monumenta The Sisters is a thoroughly fascinating story about sibling rivalry, loyalty, and love, one that is about the microcosm of the family as much as it is about the bigger world. Jonas Hassen Khemiri is the very rare combination of a deep intellectual and a true storyteller, as smart as he is entertaining. He is an important voice, a curious mind, and a generous teacher to all of us who have tried to imitate him -- Fredrik Backman, author of A Man Called Ove The Sisters is a moving appraisal of family, language, and the spiritual developments that accrue over a life. Jonas Hassen Khemiri ushers you through those developments with humanity and wit and illuminates complex familial intimacies with utter clarity -- Raven Leilani, author of Luster The Sisters is a superb novel about the pangs and longings of sibling love, about being Arab in Sweden and Swedish in Tunisia, about the strange stories that sustain us and the long rush of time. Captivating and so full of life - one of those books you live inside and miss when its over -- Isabella Hammad, author of Enter Ghost The Sisters is Jonas Hassen Khemiris masterpiece, a beautiful double helix of memory and imagination. Folding together Stockholm and New York, time and timelessness, self and other, it is an immersive, wondrous reading experience. Life overflows its pages -- Madeleine Thien, Booker Prize-shortlisted author of Do Not Say We Have Nothing An extraordinary achievement . . . this is the novel that I didnt know I was waiting for -- Adam Dalva, editor of Words without Borders Momentous . . . I dont waver an instance when I say Jonas Hassen Khemiri is the greatest Swedish lyricist of a century -- Johan Renck, director of Chernobyl and Spaceman Spanning over three decades and continents, Khemiri weaves an engaging and intricate tale about generational trauma, curses, loss and love with such ease its almost provoking. I read it as if my own life depended on the outcome for these sisters. I laughed with them, cried with them, lived with them throughout it all. And when it ended, they stayed with me. Its astonishing that such a complex and epic story can be so easy to devour. One of those stories I wish I could read again for the first time. -- Lisa Ambjörn, writer of the Netflix hit Young Royals In Scandinavia, Khemiri is easily one of the most respected and decorated authors of my generation. This book, his seventh, is a classic story about sibling rivalry, and it follows three chaotic and loving sisters over a period of thirty years . . . Khemiri, who is also of Swedish and Tunisian descent, lives and teaches in New York; hes a true citizen of the world, and he captures that experience in an exceptionally vivid way. This is one of the best novels Ive ever read about the complexities of mixed heritage. At nearly seven hundred pages, the book is quite long, but Khemiris language is propulsive - it possesses a flow and a tempo that makes you forget that youre reading -- Fredrik Backman * New Yorker * Blending humor and pathos, Khemiri perfectly encapsulates the push and pull of living in two different and sometimes dueling cultures. Its a staggering achievement * Publishers Weekly * I really loved this book. I came to love the characters . . . if someone had cooked up a book in a lab for me, specifically, it would probably resemble this . . . a novel to sink into -- Joumana Khatib * New York Times * This gripping, ambitious novel of love and lineage spans countries and generations * Vulture * For a life-long reader, its a pleasure to discover how different generations take an old form - family sagas - and find a fresh approach. One of this summers most buzzed-about novels, Jonas Hassen Khemiris The Sisters, which features three Swedish-Tunisian siblings, Ina, Evelyn and Anastasia Mikkola, and their life-long friend, a writer called Jonas, divides 732 pages into seven progressively shorter chapters. Khemiri told Publishers Weekly that he wanted to capture how time feels. Its always speeding up as you age. The first part takes place over a year, then six months, one month, one day, and finally, one minute. The effect is startling; you age along with the Mikkolas, feeling the decades fly by as though it were your own life, your own family memories and experiences going past -- Nilanjana Roy * Financial Times * One gawps nonetheless at its breadth and ambition. Its a transnational tour de force that squeezes and expands time like an accordion, or a pair of lungs .. . . with its accumulation of small, logistical details of life - meals, sleep, sex, transportation, the bathroom, excursions, paperwork, rules, differences in electrical outlets - it demands, and delivers -- Alexandra Jacobs * New York Times * A richly introspective book -- Akanksha Singh * Los Angeles Review of Books * A powerful novel that can be compared to those of Jonathan Franzen * Der Spiegel * As in Jonathan Franzens The Corrections, the lives of three siblings form the narrative framework. And, like Franzen, so much of the present fits within this framework that The Sisters could be described as an everything novel, to use Salman Rushdies phrase. Its about the racial violence of the nineties and contemporary Gansta rap; about New York as a destination of longing and a bizarre place of solitude during the pandemic; about Kurdish weddings and Tunisian relatives; about a fighter jet crash over Södermalm, an overcrowded Edward Said reading at Stockholm University, and the formative power of family myths. The real protagonist is great, almighty time, which is pushing us all through our respective lives, increasingly quickly the older we get, which is why the chapters get progressively shorter: we experience the year 2000, then a month in 2013, a week at the beginning of the pandemic, a day in 2022, and a minute in 2035, in which the true nature of the curse that weighs down the lives of the three sisters is revealed. . . . The postmodern techniques are more than just autofictional revelries and dusty identity tricks. Deep within these furious pages, theres a very existential connection between Jonas and Evelyn. And here, in the text, at least, the magic that Ina yearned for, back then with Hectors parents, is achieved: that even the complicated and muddled chaos of the sisters lives can be transformed into a large, independent story, with a beginning, middle and end. And maybe even a happy ever after. * Süddeutsche Zeitung * Its been a while since we were stunned by an ambitious family saga, but the Swedish authors 637-page doorstopper is a real winner -- Best Books of 2025 * The Times * If the novel has an overarching question its whether turning your life into a story can really help you to survive it . . . ( Khemiri) knows when to tell and when to show, when the narrator should write a disturbing letter and when to have one sister slam another ones head against a frog tank. But ultimately its a character-driven piece, with memorable women, each of whom possess a well-stocked cabinet of fears and insecurities. Ina, who is never able to relax, is particularly well drawn. In her we have the most poignant - and hilarious - depiction of a highly strung older sibling Ive come across in contemporary fiction. Its almost too painful to read the passages in which her sisters mock her . . . The Sisters is the most tender, funny and engrossing family saga Ive read since The Bee Sting, Paul Murrays mosaic-like account of one familys doom. Its ambitious, its full of life, its a triumph. Its the big baggy novel Ive been waiting for - perfect for a summer holiday -- Johanna Thomas-Corr * The Times * ( An) immersive epic saga . . . the multidimensional layers, its honesty and rawness, make it a triumph. The pleasure is in the writing and the fascinating lives Khemiri constructs. Like its structure, time with this novel flies. -- Charleen Hurtubise * Irish Times * One of the most enjoyable books Ive read so far in 2025 is Swedish writer Jonas Hassen Khemiris The Sisters. This is a must-read for fans of Jonathan Franzen or Paul Murrays The Bee Sting. It tells the story of the Mikkolas sisters, three Swedish-Tunisian siblings, and the mysterious curse they believe hangs over their family. Even at over 600 pages, the book feels like a page-turner, due in part to Khemiris use of in-built mystery and short pacy chapters normally found in a thriller, but mostly due to the captivating characters which populate this epic family drama. Khemiri is a literary superstar in his native Sweden - this is his first novel that he has written in English. If you are looking for one to put aside for long winter nights, this is it. -- Edel Coffey * The Gloss * A big baggy family saga with a difference . . . a brilliant exploration of how families and individuals construct their own personal stories to impose some kind of meaning on them -- The Best Books of 2025 * The Times * Jonas Hassen Khemiris epic feels like an apt way to kick off 2026s reading list, with its sprawling trip through time (from a Y2K New-Years party to a pivotal minute in 2035) * Elle *