Good People is a stunning read. I could not recommend it more enthusiastically. The story of an investigation into a suspicious death, this rich novel is so much more. Written with raw emotional insight, this page-turner is a fascinating, kaleidoscopic look at a grieving Afghan family caught between culture and country. With startling empathy for all sides, Patmeena Sabit plumbs the fault lines of honor, truth, prejudice, and how identity shapes guilt in the aftermath of tragedy. What a spectacular triumph this book is. This is the Afghan novel I have been eagerly waiting for -- Khaled Hosseini, author of THE KITE RUNNER
Good People is a thrilling tour de force of a novel. I'll be recommending this book to everyone -- Ann Patchett
Ingeniously structured, thought-provoking and utterly addictive, Good People will have everyone talking -- Paula Hawkins, author of THE GIRL ON THE TRAIN
Brilliant. The best debut I've read in a very long time -- Monica Ali, author of LOVE MARRIAGE
Shocking and intimate . . . absolutely unlike anything else you'll read this year -- Anna Bailey, author of TALL BONES
Good People is equal parts an immigrant novel, a tightly-wound mystery, and an oral history. Patmeena Sabit moves between these with insight, ease and grace to give us a remarkable, unsettling snapshot of our complicated times -- Sameer Pandya, author of OUR BEAUTIFUL BOYS
A triumphant debut! With the sophistication and assurance of a seasoned writer, Patmeena Sabit has crafted a prescient East-West story as only a third culture talent could have. The plot: masterful. The writing: beguiling. The pacing: breakneck. The possibility I will read this again and again: absolute. I can't wait to read what Sabit will create next! -- Alka Joshi, author of THE HENNA ARTIST and the JAIPUR trilogy
An extraordinary debut. Tense and propulsive . . . absolutely riveting -- Emma van Straaten, author of THIS IMMACULATE BODY
A clever debut probing the American dream * Guardian, '2026 Debuts to Look Out For' *
Told through several different voices, this sweeping family saga will stay with you long after you put it down * Sunday Times Style, 'Must-Reads for 2026' *
Addictively readable . . . I'd put money on this book featuring in everyone's best of lists when we reach the end of 2026 . . . it's absolutely thought-provoking, at times unsettling and gripping throughout * Stylist, '37 things that are going to be huge in 2026' *
Propulsive . . . There's a big buzz about Patmeena Sabit's Good People * Sunday Independent, 'Debuts to Look Out For in 2026' *
Clever . . . Sabit moves deftly between arguments as we, as readers, bring our own prejudices to bear on just what actually happened * Marie Claire *
Narrated by a full cast on Audible, the novel's multiple perspectives are brought to vivid life * Independent (audiobook review) *
The novel is, in essence, a crime mystery in which a community turns detective and puts a grieving family on trial. It is also a sharp portrait of an immigrant community in the modern United States, an anatomy of poisonous gossip and a commentary on wider societal divisions. Most of all, though, it is awfully addictive * Guardian *
This tale is thrilling and thought-provoking * Economist *
Gripping and emotional * Woman & Home *