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Porcupines

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Porcupines

By: Fran Fabriczki
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About this listen

Brought to you by Penguin.

Sonia believes she knows what is going on in her daughter’s life – some days she is consumed by the weight of all the knowledge: of permission slips, of appointments, of hurt feelings and favourite songs. However, unbeknownst to her, a little wedge of mystery inserted itself into their lives two days, four hours and thirteen minutes ago, when Mila started the computer languishing in a corner of their living room.

It’s 1990: the world has opened up again after the fall of the Berlin Wall, and Szonja Imre travels from Budapest to visit her older sister in Los Angeles. She’s an eighteen-year-old in search of adventure in the land of the free.

So she is surprised to find that the sister she’s always idolised has a very different idea of what it means to live the American dream. Rina is reconnecting with their religious roots, tending to her burgeoning family and to Szonja’s horrified eyes, leading a more restricted life than the one she left behind years ago in socialist Hungary. When the gap between them grows too wide to bridge, Szonja makes a decision that leaves her navigating America alone as an illegal immigrant.

Ten years later in the suburbs of LA, Sonia, as unconventional as she is guarded, rails against the confines of life as a single mother. Her beloved, precocious daughter Mila has struggles of her own: she excels at following school rules, but the unwritten social mores of the classroom remain a mystery. An even bigger mystery is who her father might be – a question her mother endlessly swats away. When Mila stumbles upon emails between Sonia and an unknown man, her curiosity sets in motion a chain of events that will cause their carefully constructed lives to implode.

© Fran Fabriczki 2026 (P) Penguin Audio 2026

Genre Fiction Historical Fiction Literary Fiction Women's Fiction World Literature

Critic Reviews

Destined to become an instant classic. Richly drawn characters in an immigrant journey as old as America herself
Funny, acerbic, and wonderfully playful, Porcupines is a brilliant, cross-generational portrait of an immigrant family constantly assailed by whether they are American enough, Hungarian enough or Jewish enough. It's completely delicious: a novel to sink into
Porcupines manages the rarest of things: depicting beautifully complex characters, while simultaneously providing a deeply comforting world. The best debut I’ve read this year
Perfect for Elif Batuman fans, this is a wonderfully warm, witty read about mothers and daughters, sisters and lovers, migration and belonging, and what it truly means to feel at home. I loved it
An acutely and deftly told story of family … Wise, emotive and funny, Fran Fabriczki is a beautiful writer who writes sisterhood and motherhood so well I felt like could reach out and touch her characters
A haunting, funny and compulsively readable novel about the intricacies of family, loss and trust
If Gilmore Girls had sharper edges and came with a Los Angeles sunburn, you’d have this riveting novel, a love letter to kids who are done keeping their parents’ secrets
A dazzling mother-daughter story, Porcupines shows us the softness that lies beneath the spikes
A really accomplished debut. Sharp and funny as hell
Sonia and her daughter Mila are wonderfully funny, unpredictable forces in this sharp, witty take on the American dream and the persistence of Old Europe
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