"Koul puts on a breezy and fleetingly filthy sideshow, but when she writes about gender and race she reveals that knife-throwing is her main act." —The New York Times
One of W Magazine's 'Best Nonfiction Books of 2025 So Far' • Named by Vulture and Literary Hub as one of 2025's Most Anticipated Releases • Named one of Electric Literature's '48 Books by Women of Color to Read in 2025'
From the cultural critic and bestselling author of One Day We’ll All Be Dead and None of This Will Matter comes a poignant, bitingly funny, and unabashedly candid new memoir in essays.
Scaachi Koul’s first book was a collection of raw, perceptive, and hilarious essays reckoning with the issues of race, body image, love, friendship, and growing up the daughter of immigrants. When the time came to start writing her next book, Scaachi assumed she’d be updating her story with essays about her elaborate four-day wedding, settling down to domestic bliss, and continuing her never-ending arguments with her parents. Instead, the Covid pandemic hit, the world went into lockdown, Scaachi’s marriage fell apart, she lost her job, and her mother was diagnosed with cancer.
Sucker Punch is about what happens when the life you thought you’d be living radically changes course, everything you thought you knew about the world and yourself has tilted on its axis, and you have to start forging a new path forward. Scaachi employs her signature humour and fierce intelligence to interrogate her previous belief that fighting is the most effective tool for progress. She examines the fights she’s had—with her parents, her ex-husband, her friends, online strangers, and herself—all in an attempt to understand when a fight is worth having, and when it's better to walk away. In a Toronto library, home to the mad and the marginalized, notes appear, written by someone who believes he is Rigoletto, the hunchbacked jester from Verdi's opera. Convinced that the young librarian, Miriam, is his daughter, he promises to protect her from grief. Little does he know how much loss she has already experienced; or does he? The Incident Report, both mystery and love story, daringly explores the fragility of our individual identities. Strikingly original in its structure, comprised of 140 highly distilled, lyric "reports," the novel depicts the tensions between private and public storytelling, the subtle dynamics of a socially exposed workplace. The Incident Report is a novel of "gestures," one that invites the reader to be astonished by the circumstances its characters confront. Reports on bizarre public behaviour intertwine with reports on the private life of the novel's narrator. Shifting constantly between harmony and dissonance, elegant in its restraint and excitingly contemporary, The Incident Report takes the pulse of our fragmented urban existence with detachment and wit, while a quiet tragedy unfolds.
Scaachi Koul a senior writer for Slate and a co-host of the Ambie Award-winning podcast Scamfluencers. She co-hosted the Emmy-nominated Netflix series Follow This, and her writing has appeared on This American Life and in The New Yorker, New York Magazine, and The Cut. You can also find her in documentaries like Quiet On Set and Pretty Baby. Her bestselling first book, One Day We’ll All Be Dead and None of This Will Matter, was a New York Times Editors’ Choice, a Globe and Mail best book of 2017, and a finalist for The Leacock Medal for Humour and the Kobo Emerging Writer Prize. You can follow her on Instagram or on her Substack, Hater Nation. Originally from Calgary, she lives in Brooklyn, NY.
Publisher: Knopf Canada (March 4 2025)
Language: English
Hardcover: 272 pages
ISBN-10: 1039056121
ISBN-13: 978-1039056121
Item weight: 350 g
Dimensions: 14.71 x 2.41 x 21.69 cm