Good News, Alexa Yasemin Brahme
Good News, Alexa Yasemin Brahme
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Good News
A Novel

Author: Alexa Yasemin Brahme

Narrator: Mozhan Navabi

Unabridged: 7 hr 11 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 05/05/2026


Synopsis

In this stylish provocative novel, a young artist struggles to find her way in New York City while navigating strained relationships, the reappearance of an ex, and her burgeoning sense of self. A mess, of course, ensues. 

Maggie is on the brink. Her MFA thesis—a vast canvas of twenty women suspended between life and death—is met with polite confusion, sending her into the throes of an obsessive work spiral. She’s ignoring calls from her frantic Turkish mother and drifting apart from her marriage-material boyfriend, Rob, who, lately, spends every waking moment at the office, including some suspiciously late nights. To make matters worse, her brother John (perfect, doctor) is dating Maggie’s art-world rival: a performance artist who constantly seems to be skyrocketing toward fame even after renouncing her name to be called simply “the Artist.”

But it’s when Maggie’s ex reappears that her forced composure starts to slip. A smooth-talking art critic with power and charm, Rakib sees Maggie in a way that completely mystifies her. Then come whispers that her painting might be nominated for a grant that could launch her career. With deadlines looming, her relationship with Rob faltering, and her sense of self in flux, Maggie begins to question not just her art but the entire life she’s been trying to build.

Set against the push and pull of immigrant family expectations, the competitive world of contemporary art, and the relentless uncertainty of one’s late twenties, Good News is a mordantly clever and emotionally resonant debut that will appeal to readers of Lily King, Sarah Thankam Mathews, and Coco Mellors.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Ruby on May 20, 2026

Interesting look at women as being just as capable of destruction as they are at creation - of taking up big space in each other’s lives and the madness that can come with it......more

Goodreads review by Elisabeth on May 06, 2026

I thought Good News was brilliant, but I still feel conflicted about its structure and journey— but I think it’s also lovely that it’s the type of novel that you truly sit with and wonder about its themes and meanings, even if it means internally battling with the characters and their choices. Our p......more

Goodreads review by Patty on May 05, 2026

Loved this debut novel centered around Maggie, who is on the verge of graduating and starting her life as an artist. We follow her as she is trying to prepare her final project, which she is hoping gets her nominated for a grant. We also follow her relationship with her partner, Rob, and her family.......more

Goodreads review by Carole on May 17, 2026

She questions her art and the path of her life Maggie's existence is not going as well as she'd like. She is working on her MFA in painting and has undertaken an ambitious project as her thesis, but her professor is not very enthusiastic about it and suggests it needs work, making Maggie question her......more

Goodreads review by ♡︎.ᐟજ⁀➴ Erie on May 19, 2026

Good News 🎨🖤 by Alexa Yasemin Brahme 3.75 thoughtful stars Thank you to Algonquin Books for the gifted copy 💛📖 Good News is one of those literary novels that feels quiet on the surface, but underneath it is all friction. Identity, art, family expectations, ambition, insecurity, old love, bad choices, an......more


Quotes

Good News is about the complicated work of finding one's way—as a woman, as an artist, as a daughter, as a lover. Alexa Brahme's debut, like Sally Rooney's, is a clear-eyed exploration of passion and discontent in equal measure. I rooted for Maggie all the way through.”—Emma Straub, author of This Time Tomorrow

“[A] punchy critique of high art, and a revealing look at what it takes to find yourself as a young artist. Women are the driving force of this richly realized story, and [Brahme] excels at making their relationships as nuanced, complicated and fulfilling as they are in life.”—Mira Jacob, author of The Sleepwalker's Guide to Dancing