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The Guardian

Rory McIlroy surges into six-shot Masters lead with stunning second-round flourish ‘That’ll be the end’: actor Sam Neill joins fight to stop controversial goldmine near his New Zealand vineyard Roberto De Zerbi targets ‘Ange-ball’ revival to save Spurs from relegation Bath hit back to reach semi-final after stunning Northampton in 11-try epic Secret Garden to Outcome: the week in rave reviews Zebras, wealth and power: Hungary’s election tests Orbán’s grip on power ‘TikTok effect’ brings sellout crowds and younger fans to Grand National meeting The war over Omagh’s gold: the £21bn mine plan tearing a community apart Britain’s shadow workforce is paid as little as 65p an hour. Who cares for the carers? From You, Me & Tuscany to Euphoria: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead Six great reads: the man who let snakes bite him, masked heavy metal and the brutal reality for foreign students in the UK American Classic review – I defy you not to fall in love with Kevin Kline and Laura Linney’s tender comedy Cuba’s doctors were a lifeline for the world. Now the Caribbean is shamefully complicit in the US drive to expel them An environmental disaster in Moldova has Russia’s fingerprints all over it RMIT drops misconduct case against student who accused university of being ‘complicit in Gaza genocide’ Ichiro Suzuki statue unveiling goes awry as bronze bat snaps during ceremony Survivors of Epstein’s abuse accuse Melania Trump of ‘shifting burden’ on to victims European football: Real Madrid held at home by Girona to extend winless run Arne Slot insists he is ‘aligned’ with Liverpool board and fans as squad is rebuilt Kamala Harris ‘thinking about’ running for president again in 2028 JD Vance warns Iran against trying to ‘play’ the US in peace talks West Ham double up twice to thrash Wolves and put Spurs in relegation zone Trump administration releases new renderings of so-called ‘Arc de Trump’ Crispin Odey drops £79m libel claim against FT over sexual misconduct allegations Bafta apologises for events surrounding John Davidson’s Tourette’s outburst Cocktail of the week: Bar Shrimp’s la rosita – recipe New drug may extend survival in aggressive ovarian cancer, trial shows One dead and 27 injured after bus with British passengers crashes in Canary Islands Pope adds to Smith’s mass of Surrey runs with England woes a world away OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s home targeted with molotov cocktail Reform UK local election candidate was twice disciplined by Tories over ‘racist comments’ Remaining in Nato is in best interests of US, says Keir Starmer Prince Harry sued for defamation by charity he co-founded Anthropic’s new AI tool has implications for us all – whether we can use it or not Concerns raised about motorbike tourist trail after death of British teenager in Vietnam The Guardian view on Trump’s civilisational threats: the words that fuel war must be condemned The Guardian view on dystopias for our times: the American nightmare Doctors’ leader claims new reduced pay offer killed chances of ending strikes in England Netanyahu-ism has achieved nothing for Israelis – and come at a monstrously high price Deborah Levy: ‘CS Lewis’s White Witch terrified me – but I wanted to meet her’ How I Shop with Michelle Ogundehin: ‘We grownups have enough stuff already’ Trump’s war and Melania’s Epstein statement, with US editor Betsy Reed – The Latest We have to stop killer motorists on Britain’s roads UK starts crackdown on EU citizens’ post-Brexit rights Londoners aren’t unfriendly – but don’t compare us to New Yorkers The religious right and the perversion of faith Artemis II images reignite moon mission memories Orbán and Magyar trade accusations in last days of Hungary election campaign Reckonwrong: How Long Has It Been? review | Safi Bugel's experimental album of the month Martin Rowson on Middle East peace talks – cartoon Masters magic, the Grand National and Premier League drama – follow with us Fears of UK and EU flight cancellations as airports warn of jet fuel shortages Reform’s petulance over slavery reparations shows it just doesn’t grasp Britain’s place in the modern world Peers vote to ban pornography depicting sex acts between stepfamily members Starbucks’s retail arm gets £13.7m tax credit even as sales increase Flyby review – interstellar musical is a voyage of epic strangeness Grand National preview: Jagwar can deny Irish cohort in Aintree classic Week in wildlife: an ostrich on the lam, a tortoise crossing a road and surfing seals Anger as swifts’ nesting holes in Derbyshire rail viaduct ‘blocked up’ Peter Mandelson faces fixed-penalty notice for urinating in public ‘There’s no shortage of terrifying technology’: how AI became TV drama’s new go-to villain ‘Fresher than anything in a shop’: the best recipe boxes and meal kits for time-poor foodies, tested Who was Hilma? 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Homebound by Portia Elan review – a Cloud Atlas-like puzzle-box novel
Beejay Silco · 2026-05-01 · via The Guardian

This is the kind of book you pitch by analogy: JG Ballard meets Gabrielle Zevin; Isaac Asimov meets Stephen Chbosky; Ready Player One meets Love, Simon (replete with ferris wheel). I’ve been describing it to friends as a YA Kazuo Ishiguro set adrift in Kevin Costner’s Waterworld. It turns out I have two kinds of friends: those who hear that description as praise, and those who heed it as a warning.

Novels that demand comparisons rarely survive them. This one does (though it could do without that mawkish ferris wheel). American author Portia Elan’s debut is a gentle hymn to found families – the kin we choose rather than inherit – and it’s fitting that it reads that way, assembled from allegiances. Elan knows what her characters will discover: stories are how we claim one another.

One comparison feels indispensable: David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas – that beloved, metafictional mind-bender. Elan is less oblique and tricksy than Mitchell (where he alludes, she underlines). But Homebound still has a puzzle-box thrill – the click of pieces locking into place. The family resemblance is unmistakable: four interleaved stories of four women divided by time, but bound to each other; their connections as cryptic as they are inevitable.

In 1983, in the beige sprawl of suburban Cincinnati, Becks grieves her uncle. Something essential is being left unsaid about his death, but also about his life (“Everyone is always sparing me the details”). Becks is many things: spiky daughter, smitten friend, zine-rock fangirl and aspiring programmer. Might her inheritance – a pile of floppy disks – help her decode her place in the world?

In 2078, integrative biologist Dr Tamar Portman designs sentient humanoids (Ayes) with minds like ecosystems: collective, reparative, symbiotic. They are intended as planet-healers (“Their primary responsibility isn’t to humans or human things”), but Tamar’s investors have more venal ambitions, and the means to realise them. Bound by a corporate NDA, Tamar drafts emails she will never send to a friend we never meet. But every keystroke leaves a trace; so does every story she feeds her machines. The Ayes have ears.

In 2586, salt-hardened Yesiko captains the salvage ship Babylon, scraping a living from the remnants of a drowned world. She carries a debt she can’t outrun: the cost of the nano-medicine keeping her crewmate, Root, alive. He’s her ballast, a keeper of stories, but the treatment is failing and so is the myth of their self-sufficiency.

Finally, in the interstellar darkness, Lt California Solo pilots a mission to save a fleet of stalled starships: Solo by name, solo by assignment. She’s the heroine of a text-based computer game – the pixelated equivalent of a Choose Your Own Adventure comic. What choices will keep her story alive? And who, exactly, is making them?

Family secrets, robot reckonings, queer becomings, lonely spacefarers, drowned futures and great floods: we’ve read it all before. But that’s the point. Homebound is a novel of inheritance: the shared grammar of folklore and ritual, prayer and pop culture. This is the rope that keeps us “safely tethered to history”, the way the living remain in conversation with the dead. Becks finds belonging in the sweaty thrum of a rock concert. The Ayes observe a day of rest to refresh their circuitry. A copy of Toni Morrison’s Beloved travels with the crew of the Babylon. Lt Solo borrows her surname from a galaxy far, far away. “We are our stories,” Root tells Yesiko. “We show respect to the stories, and they keep us.” He teaches her the weekly pause of Shabbat, and the mourner’s Kaddish. She carries them on.

Elan’s most elusive consciousness is an Aye called Chaya, a passenger on the Babylon, and a relic of the world before the flood. They could be a prophet; they could be a malfunction; they could be both. But Chaya is the robot Walt Whitman might have imagined, had he been a tech bro instead of a poet: plural and multitudinous. We meet “the self that learned the cost of shame” and “the self that learned to believe”. Chaya speaks to us in chorus: “We are more than a robot. We must be. Although we always doubt and question.” There are plenty of knotty, metaphysical questions here, as there always are when machines start dreaming, but the most AI-urgent is also the oldest: what care do we owe one another?

In their own ways, all Elan’s characters are seeking a salve for loneliness: “the possibility of another like us, somewhere in the vast darkness of the universe”. The author tends to oblige. The quiet promise of her novel is that your people are out there, even if they aren’t technically human. Homebound is sentimental, soft-hearted and guileless – the adjectives critics tend to use sneeringly, as though kindness were easy. It’s the sort of book that might have kept my younger self company. I’m glad this generation will have it.