The Catch
A darkly whimsical debut about women daring to live and create with impunity.
Twin sisters Clara and Dempsey have always struggled to relate, their familial bond severed after their mother vanished into the Thames. In adulthood, they are content to be all but estranged, until Clara sees a woman who looks exactly like their mother on the streets of London. The catch: this version of Serene, aged not a day, has enjoyed a childless life.
Clara, a celebrity author in desperate need of validation, believes Serene is their mother, while Dempsey, isolated and content to remain so, believes she is a con woman. As they clash over this stranger, the sisters hurtle toward an altercation that threatens their very existence, forcing them to finally confront their pasts--together. In her riveting first foray into fiction, Yrsa Daley-Ward conjures a kaleidoscopic multiverse of daughterhood and mother-want, exploring the sacrifices that Black women must make for self-actualization. The result is a marvel of a debut novel that boldly asks, ‘How can it ever, ever be a crime to choose yourself?’
About the author
Yrsa Daley-Ward is a writer, poet and actress of mixed Jamaican and Nigerian heritage.
Since publishing her first poetry collection, the widely beloved bone, Yrsa has been in a constant state of exciting creative output, which earns her continued critical acclaim. Her follow-up book, the lyrical memoir, The Terrible, garnered glowing praise and won her the prestigious PEN Ackerley Prize in 2019. Following that, she published The How, which NPR called 'a hopeful work of meditation and healing' and has been taught in women’s prisons around the world.
Her Substack, The Utter, reaches tens of thousands weekly, exploring creation, connection, and what makes life worth living. She lives in Los Angeles.
Judge Simon Okotie on The Catch
"The story of twin sisters whose dead mother mysteriously reappears, The Catch is an extraordinary shape-shifting, genre-defying work of fiction. Reading, by turns, as popular fiction, literary fiction and science fiction, it calls all such distinctions into question. An engrossing and thought-provoking work, The Catch brings a compulsive, formally inventive logic that is all its own."