âMaya is not polite, and although I found her captivating and charming, Sharmaâs goal is not to make her likable. Maya is as horrible, and as fully human, as men in literature have always been allowed to be.â âNew York Times Sunday Book Review
âSharmaâs lucid intelligence makes this story of the death throes of a marriage between a junkie and an alcoholic impossible to get out of your mind.â âVulture
âDebut novelist Jade Sharma writes in a voice that is equal parts irreverent and hilarious, depressive and hopeful, and Problems was by far one of the most interesting and uncommon books I read this year.â âBustle
âWith searing honesty and an unflinching gaze, Sharma brilliantly dismantles the brittle structures that so many young women today have built around themselves in the hopes that eventually the interior will match whatâs on the outside.â âNylon
âSharmaâs debut novel is an uncompromising and unforgettable depiction of the corrosive loop of addiction. . . . There is a propulsive energy in Mayaâs story, guided by her askew yet precise perspective . . . . In Mayaâs voice, Sharma has crafted a momentous force that never flags and feels painfully honest.\" âPublishers Weekly, starred review
âThe novel is written so well that the relentless and destructive rhythm of heroin abuse seems calming, metaphysical, and occasionally even funny. Sharmaâs descriptions are vivid and sage . . . lulling readers into a similarly opiate state to which they will readily succumb and from which, like the protagonist, it will take some time to recover. An absorbing novel carried by a seemingly hopeless protagonist you will want to befriend and save.â âKirkus
âJagged and hilarious and challenging and smart as hell.â âLiterary Hub
âSharma laces her prose with a particularly strong strain of dark humor, leaving elegant signatures on every page with the abandon of a drunk hostess whoâs been handed a blank prescription pad, granted immunity, and charged with a divine imperative to make sure everyone has a good time.â âThe Rumpus
âMayaâs inner world is raw and repulsive, but astutely rendered by Sharma. The book is simultaneously hard to read and hard to put down.â âPublishers Weekly
â[Mayaâs] problems could fill a bookâand in fact, they do, in a brisk, mordantly funny, fragmented narrative that is refreshingly honest, despite the fact that Maya is a liar.â âLos Angeles Times
âFunny and perfect.â âA.V. Club
â[Maya is] by turns raunchy, clever, spunky, sage, funny and forlorn as she barrels through the vicissitudes of a life of addiction grasping for an escape hatchâsuch a fresh voice that we canât help but hope she finds one. . . . Jade Sharmaâs debut novel of a young New York City junkie is on the money, harrowing, perspicacious, funny and somehow still uplifting.â âShelf Awareness
âJade Sharmaâs great gift is in how she makes the reader addicted to the addict.â âIndependent
âProblems is filled with sharp dialogue, perfectly crafted one-liners and succinct observations . . .â âThe Guardian
âProblems is, indeed, a funny book, but itâs hardly a comedy. It is brutal, sarcastic, often startling in its depictions of sex, sex work, drug use, and disordered eating habitsâbut these highlight rather than distract from the deep vulnerability at its core.â âNew Statesman
â. . . a rather tender novel in places, without being sentimental . . .â âSpectator
âItâs simultaneously hilarious, sexy, and heartbreaking.â âBustle
âProblems, told in fragments of Mayaâs thoughts, avoids the clichĂ©s of addiction and recovery narratives to speak to something dark, hilarious and deeply real.ââAutostraddle
âJade Sharmaâs debut is a darkly funny character study of an unhappy yet witty-as-hell woman whose self-destructive streak is as appalling as it is somehow understandable. Problems challenges readers to forget traditional redemption stories and yet to still find empathy for the messiest of heroines.â âEsquire
âProblems tells Mayaâs story of heroin abuse, personal flailing and recovery in raw, razor-sharp prose, painting an unromanticized yet witty and profound portrait of addiction.â âHuffPost
âMayaâs complex blend of vulnerability and ennui is enthralling, and her abiding fascination with bodiesâsex, sensations, shortcomingsâkeeps her commentary lively even as her life careens out of control. Given such diversions, itâs perhaps easy to miss the big picture: the invitation that Sharma is extending to readers to reimagine the possibilities for what a âheroin novelâ can be.â âCritical Mass
âThe end of Problems presents a glimmer of hope that she may finally be able to crawl out of it and evolve into the person she wants to be.â âStar Tribune
âRaw, unrepentant, and biting with dark humor, Problems turns the addiction-redemption narrative inside out, as Sharma follows heroin hobbyist Maya through her increasingly chaotic life after both the end of her marriage and an affair.â âPoets and Writers
âThe problem with Jade Sharmaâs novel, Problems, is that it ends. The narrator, Maya, is a hot mess with zero percent of her shit together, and yet as I got to know her through the Sharmaâs inventive narrative voice, I saw her asâor perhaps wanted her to beâmy friend.â âThe Rumpus
âMayaâs reflections on being Indian American when âthe whole world wants young white girlsâ do more to show the damage of internalized white supremacy than many of todayâs internet-published hot takes.â âBitch Magazine
âProblems is a book that wrestles with you; you will try to put it down but youâll be unsuccessful. And when you finish reading, it will feel like a masochistic act. But like any great character, Maya will linger with you, so you can struggle together.â âBust
âMaya, with her bodily neuroses and impulses and lusts and bolts of cleverly crafted philosophical insight, is the novel. And sheâs hard to stop watching and caring about and even, optimistically, rooting for. . . . A psychologically astute portrait of a womanâs cycle of addiction, the ebb and flow of her life around it, and her own hilarious, bittersweet and brilliant inner monologue through it all.â âHuffPost
âProblems unnerves in its facility to careen between acidic humor and frank depictions of desperation, as well as in its refusal to disavow completely the allure of the high.â âLiterary Hub
âProblems is a book that demands to be read in a gulp from its first sentence . . .â âBookends Review
âI love how raw this book is. Itâs very stream of consciousness, and itâs told with a mordant sense of humor too.â âWord of Mouth
âBinging and purging, a bad relationship with her MS-afflicted mother, a bad relationship with most people: Sharma smartly treats these as things to endure rather than as things to address.â âElectric Literature
â[Problems is] complex and unflinching, but itâs among those messy ruins of her self-made life that I found myself feeling oddly and genuinely uplifted.â âGuernica
âThereâs very little ease to start in Problems, a debut novel about addiction from the deceptively sober perspective of a bona fide anti-heroine.â âBookforum
âJade Sharmaâs Problems is one of the yearâs strongest debut novels, a powerful book that deals with addiction and gender politics through the eyes of its unforgettable and vividly drawn protagonist.â âLargehearted Boy
âFirst out of the gate for the new venture is the utterly ambitious and unique Problems, a debut novel from Jade Sharma that offers a disturbing, but also humorous, glimpse into heroin addiction and the end of a crumbling marriage. . . . Thanks to Sharmaâs quick, episodic style, Mayaâs fall from grace blisters off the page. Itâs electric writing.â âBrooklyn MagazineÂ
âFew books feel as honest as Problems, Jade Sharmaâs debut novel.â âThe Influence
âRest assured that Sharma succeeds in breaking every clichĂ© about redemption narratives.â âLargehearted Boy
âBold and honest, Problems is a fresh look at recovery, redemption, and one womanâs increasing nest of problems.â âBuzzFeed
âDark, funny, relentless.â âElle
âFew debuts manage to be as forceful and commanding as this one.â âRain Taxi
âBelieve it or not, it is possible to infuse a bit of wit into a novel about heroin addiction.â âStyleCaster
âUnsettling, aware, self-conscious, vivid, honest, gorgeousâProblems does it all, all while eschewing traditional expectations of story, plot, and character.â âVol. 1 Brooklyn
âProblems isnât your typical addiction story, because it isnât your typical narrator, written by someone who blows the usual heroin narratives out of the water. Sentence by sentence, it coils around you, then tightens. Itâs a compulsively readable trap.â âThe Fanzine
âSharma gives us Maya, a fresh voice. Sheâs vulgar, sheâs funny, sheâs bold, bawdy, insightful, and she has the voice of a woman, a twist to the usual heroin-narrative with thoughts and worries that are unique to women and to a womanâs experience with addiction.â âNewPages
âItâs a darkly funny tale of addiction, recovery, and redemption for every person, whether theyâre âlikeableâ or not. . . . Problems drags its readers so deep into Mayaâs psyche that you canât help but feel her self-consciousness, addiction, and pain.â âFusion
âOne of the best books Iâve read this year, if not one of the best books Iâve read in a long time. . . . A stunning novel.â âBook Riot Podcast
âThe voice is incredibly funny, offhandedly insightful, and captivating.â âLiterary Hub
âItâs a powerfully told novel, brisk and harrowing in equal measure.â âVol. 1 Brookly
âProblems is a novel of tragic souls and their predicaments that manages to be consistently hilarious and a rip-roaring read.â âIrish Times
ââSomewhere along the way, there stopped being new days,â reads the first sentence, and the bookâs structure echoes this repetitive flow of time, largely eschewing chapters and page breaks and instead allowing its narrative to develop through a series of short paragraphs. The result is a novel that carries the reader along with its protagonist on her uneven journey, making every descent along the way seem even more avoidable in hindsight.â âGoogle Play
âJade Sharma is the appalling, hilarious love child of Denis Johnson and Maggie Estep, and Problems is as unrepentant and transgressive a novel as they come. Every coming-of-age story except this one is a lie.â âElisa Albert
âSearing. Brutal. Sublime. Hysterical. Terrifying. Exacting. Essential. Indelible. Unforgettable.â âDale Peck
âThe self-degrading, self-knowing narrator of Jade Sharmaâs Problems dares to recount her beyond messy life in clean, lucidâand often funnyâprose. Sheâd never be so glib as to call herself a survivor, but even at this dark novelâs darkest moments her voice itself makes the case for her resilience and her humanity.â âDavid Gates
âProblems unnerves in its facility to careen between acidic humor and frank depictions of desperation, as well as in its refusal to disavow completely the allure of the high.â âLiterary Hub

Problems
A novel by Jade Sharma
July 5, 2016 âą 5.5 x 8.25 âą 208 Pages âą 978-1-56689-442-5
Girls meets Trainspotting: Problems is a bold and witty book about a part-time heroin user and her increasingly full-time problems.
Dark, raw, and very funny, Problems introduces us to Maya, a young woman with a smart mouth, time to kill, and a heroin hobby that isnât much fun anymore. Mayaâs been able to get by in New York on her wits and a dead-end bookstore job for years, but when her husband leaves her and her favorite professor ends their affair, her barely-calibrated life descends into chaos, and she has to make some choices. Mayaâs struggle to be alone, to be a woman, and to be thoughtful and imperfect and alive in a world that doesnât really care what happens to her is rendered with dead-eyed clarity and unnerving charm. This book takes every tired trope about addiction and recovery, âlikeableâ characters, and redemption narratives, and blows them to pieces.
About the Author
Jade Sharma is a writer living in New York. She has an MFA from the New School.
Thanks to a 2013 ADA Access Improvement Grant administered by VSA Minnesota for the Metropolitan Regional Arts Council, this title is also formatted for screen readers which make text accessible to the blind and visually impaired. To purchase this title for use with a screen reader please call (612) 338-0125 or email us at [email protected].
Reviews
âMaya is not polite, and although I found her captivating and charming, Sharmaâs goal is not to make her likable. Maya is as horrible, and as fully human, as men in literature have always been allowed to be.â âNew York Times Sunday Book Review
âSharmaâs lucid intelligence makes this story of the death throes of a marriage between a junkie and an alcoholic impossible to get out of your mind.â âVulture
âDebut novelist Jade Sharma writes in a voice that is equal parts irreverent and hilarious, depressive and hopeful, and Problems was by far one of the most interesting and uncommon books I read this year.â âBustle
âWith searing honesty and an unflinching gaze, Sharma brilliantly dismantles the brittle structures that so many young women today have built around themselves in the hopes that eventually the interior will match whatâs on the outside.â âNylon
âSharmaâs debut novel is an uncompromising and unforgettable depiction of the corrosive loop of addiction. . . . There is a propulsive energy in Mayaâs story, guided by her askew yet precise perspective . . . . In Mayaâs voice, Sharma has crafted a momentous force that never flags and feels painfully honest." âPublishers Weekly, starred review
âThe novel is written so well that the relentless and destructive rhythm of heroin abuse seems calming, metaphysical, and occasionally even funny. Sharmaâs descriptions are vivid and sage . . . lulling readers into a similarly opiate state to which they will readily succumb and from which, like the protagonist, it will take some time to recover. An absorbing novel carried by a seemingly hopeless protagonist you will want to befriend and save.â âKirkus
âJagged and hilarious and challenging and smart as hell.â âLiterary Hub
âSharma laces her prose with a particularly strong strain of dark humor, leaving elegant signatures on every page with the abandon of a drunk hostess whoâs been handed a blank prescription pad, granted immunity, and charged with a divine imperative to make sure everyone has a good time.â âThe Rumpus
âMayaâs inner world is raw and repulsive, but astutely rendered by Sharma. The book is simultaneously hard to read and hard to put down.â âPublishers Weekly
â[Mayaâs] problems could fill a bookâand in fact, they do, in a brisk, mordantly funny, fragmented narrative that is refreshingly honest, despite the fact that Maya is a liar.â âLos Angeles Times
âFunny and perfect.â âA.V. Club
â[Maya is] by turns raunchy, clever, spunky, sage, funny and forlorn as she barrels through the vicissitudes of a life of addiction grasping for an escape hatchâsuch a fresh voice that we canât help but hope she finds one. . . . Jade Sharmaâs debut novel of a young New York City junkie is on the money, harrowing, perspicacious, funny and somehow still uplifting.â âShelf Awareness
âJade Sharmaâs great gift is in how she makes the reader addicted to the addict.â âIndependent
âProblems is filled with sharp dialogue, perfectly crafted one-liners and succinct observations . . .â âThe Guardian
âProblems is, indeed, a funny book, but itâs hardly a comedy. It is brutal, sarcastic, often startling in its depictions of sex, sex work, drug use, and disordered eating habitsâbut these highlight rather than distract from the deep vulnerability at its core.â âNew Statesman
â. . . a rather tender novel in places, without being sentimental . . .â âSpectator
âItâs simultaneously hilarious, sexy, and heartbreaking.â âBustle
âProblems, told in fragments of Mayaâs thoughts, avoids the clichĂ©s of addiction and recovery narratives to speak to something dark, hilarious and deeply real.ââAutostraddle
âJade Sharmaâs debut is a darkly funny character study of an unhappy yet witty-as-hell woman whose self-destructive streak is as appalling as it is somehow understandable. Problems challenges readers to forget traditional redemption stories and yet to still find empathy for the messiest of heroines.â âEsquire
âProblems tells Mayaâs story of heroin abuse, personal flailing and recovery in raw, razor-sharp prose, painting an unromanticized yet witty and profound portrait of addiction.â âHuffPost
âMayaâs complex blend of vulnerability and ennui is enthralling, and her abiding fascination with bodiesâsex, sensations, shortcomingsâkeeps her commentary lively even as her life careens out of control. Given such diversions, itâs perhaps easy to miss the big picture: the invitation that Sharma is extending to readers to reimagine the possibilities for what a âheroin novelâ can be.â âCritical Mass
âThe end of Problems presents a glimmer of hope that she may finally be able to crawl out of it and evolve into the person she wants to be.â âStar Tribune
âRaw, unrepentant, and biting with dark humor, Problems turns the addiction-redemption narrative inside out, as Sharma follows heroin hobbyist Maya through her increasingly chaotic life after both the end of her marriage and an affair.â âPoets and Writers
âThe problem with Jade Sharmaâs novel, Problems, is that it ends. The narrator, Maya, is a hot mess with zero percent of her shit together, and yet as I got to know her through the Sharmaâs inventive narrative voice, I saw her asâor perhaps wanted her to beâmy friend.â âThe Rumpus
âMayaâs reflections on being Indian American when âthe whole world wants young white girlsâ do more to show the damage of internalized white supremacy than many of todayâs internet-published hot takes.â âBitch Magazine
âProblems is a book that wrestles with you; you will try to put it down but youâll be unsuccessful. And when you finish reading, it will feel like a masochistic act. But like any great character, Maya will linger with you, so you can struggle together.â âBust
âMaya, with her bodily neuroses and impulses and lusts and bolts of cleverly crafted philosophical insight, is the novel. And sheâs hard to stop watching and caring about and even, optimistically, rooting for. . . . A psychologically astute portrait of a womanâs cycle of addiction, the ebb and flow of her life around it, and her own hilarious, bittersweet and brilliant inner monologue through it all.â âHuffPost
âProblems unnerves in its facility to careen between acidic humor and frank depictions of desperation, as well as in its refusal to disavow completely the allure of the high.â âLiterary Hub
âProblems is a book that demands to be read in a gulp from its first sentence . . .â âBookends Review
âI love how raw this book is. Itâs very stream of consciousness, and itâs told with a mordant sense of humor too.â âWord of Mouth
âBinging and purging, a bad relationship with her MS-afflicted mother, a bad relationship with most people: Sharma smartly treats these as things to endure rather than as things to address.â âElectric Literature
â[Problems is] complex and unflinching, but itâs among those messy ruins of her self-made life that I found myself feeling oddly and genuinely uplifted.â âGuernica
âThereâs very little ease to start in Problems, a debut novel about addiction from the deceptively sober perspective of a bona fide anti-heroine.â âBookforum
âJade Sharmaâs Problems is one of the yearâs strongest debut novels, a powerful book that deals with addiction and gender politics through the eyes of its unforgettable and vividly drawn protagonist.â âLargehearted Boy
âFirst out of the gate for the new venture is the utterly ambitious and unique Problems, a debut novel from Jade Sharma that offers a disturbing, but also humorous, glimpse into heroin addiction and the end of a crumbling marriage. . . . Thanks to Sharmaâs quick, episodic style, Mayaâs fall from grace blisters off the page. Itâs electric writing.â âBrooklyn MagazineÂ
âFew books feel as honest as Problems, Jade Sharmaâs debut novel.â âThe Influence
âRest assured that Sharma succeeds in breaking every clichĂ© about redemption narratives.â âLargehearted Boy
âBold and honest, Problems is a fresh look at recovery, redemption, and one womanâs increasing nest of problems.â âBuzzFeed
âDark, funny, relentless.â âElle
âFew debuts manage to be as forceful and commanding as this one.â âRain Taxi
âBelieve it or not, it is possible to infuse a bit of wit into a novel about heroin addiction.â âStyleCaster
âUnsettling, aware, self-conscious, vivid, honest, gorgeousâProblems does it all, all while eschewing traditional expectations of story, plot, and character.â âVol. 1 Brooklyn
âProblems isnât your typical addiction story, because it isnât your typical narrator, written by someone who blows the usual heroin narratives out of the water. Sentence by sentence, it coils around you, then tightens. Itâs a compulsively readable trap.â âThe Fanzine
âSharma gives us Maya, a fresh voice. Sheâs vulgar, sheâs funny, sheâs bold, bawdy, insightful, and she has the voice of a woman, a twist to the usual heroin-narrative with thoughts and worries that are unique to women and to a womanâs experience with addiction.â âNewPages
âItâs a darkly funny tale of addiction, recovery, and redemption for every person, whether theyâre âlikeableâ or not. . . . Problems drags its readers so deep into Mayaâs psyche that you canât help but feel her self-consciousness, addiction, and pain.â âFusion
âOne of the best books Iâve read this year, if not one of the best books Iâve read in a long time. . . . A stunning novel.â âBook Riot Podcast
âThe voice is incredibly funny, offhandedly insightful, and captivating.â âLiterary Hub
âItâs a powerfully told novel, brisk and harrowing in equal measure.â âVol. 1 Brookly
âProblems is a novel of tragic souls and their predicaments that manages to be consistently hilarious and a rip-roaring read.â âIrish Times
ââSomewhere along the way, there stopped being new days,â reads the first sentence, and the bookâs structure echoes this repetitive flow of time, largely eschewing chapters and page breaks and instead allowing its narrative to develop through a series of short paragraphs. The result is a novel that carries the reader along with its protagonist on her uneven journey, making every descent along the way seem even more avoidable in hindsight.â âGoogle Play
âJade Sharma is the appalling, hilarious love child of Denis Johnson and Maggie Estep, and Problems is as unrepentant and transgressive a novel as they come. Every coming-of-age story except this one is a lie.â âElisa Albert
âSearing. Brutal. Sublime. Hysterical. Terrifying. Exacting. Essential. Indelible. Unforgettable.â âDale Peck
âThe self-degrading, self-knowing narrator of Jade Sharmaâs Problems dares to recount her beyond messy life in clean, lucidâand often funnyâprose. Sheâd never be so glib as to call herself a survivor, but even at this dark novelâs darkest moments her voice itself makes the case for her resilience and her humanity.â âDavid Gates
âProblems unnerves in its facility to careen between acidic humor and frank depictions of desperation, as well as in its refusal to disavow completely the allure of the high.â âLiterary Hub
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
A novel by Jade Sharma
July 5, 2016 âą 5.5 x 8.25 âą 208 Pages âą 978-1-56689-442-5
Girls meets Trainspotting: Problems is a bold and witty book about a part-time heroin user and her increasingly full-time problems.
Dark, raw, and very funny, Problems introduces us to Maya, a young woman with a smart mouth, time to kill, and a heroin hobby that isnât much fun anymore. Mayaâs been able to get by in New York on her wits and a dead-end bookstore job for years, but when her husband leaves her and her favorite professor ends their affair, her barely-calibrated life descends into chaos, and she has to make some choices. Mayaâs struggle to be alone, to be a woman, and to be thoughtful and imperfect and alive in a world that doesnât really care what happens to her is rendered with dead-eyed clarity and unnerving charm. This book takes every tired trope about addiction and recovery, âlikeableâ characters, and redemption narratives, and blows them to pieces.
About the Author
Jade Sharma is a writer living in New York. She has an MFA from the New School.
Thanks to a 2013 ADA Access Improvement Grant administered by VSA Minnesota for the Metropolitan Regional Arts Council, this title is also formatted for screen readers which make text accessible to the blind and visually impaired. To purchase this title for use with a screen reader please call (612) 338-0125 or email us at [email protected].
Reviews
âMaya is not polite, and although I found her captivating and charming, Sharmaâs goal is not to make her likable. Maya is as horrible, and as fully human, as men in literature have always been allowed to be.â âNew York Times Sunday Book Review
âSharmaâs lucid intelligence makes this story of the death throes of a marriage between a junkie and an alcoholic impossible to get out of your mind.â âVulture
âDebut novelist Jade Sharma writes in a voice that is equal parts irreverent and hilarious, depressive and hopeful, and Problems was by far one of the most interesting and uncommon books I read this year.â âBustle
âWith searing honesty and an unflinching gaze, Sharma brilliantly dismantles the brittle structures that so many young women today have built around themselves in the hopes that eventually the interior will match whatâs on the outside.â âNylon
âSharmaâs debut novel is an uncompromising and unforgettable depiction of the corrosive loop of addiction. . . . There is a propulsive energy in Mayaâs story, guided by her askew yet precise perspective . . . . In Mayaâs voice, Sharma has crafted a momentous force that never flags and feels painfully honest." âPublishers Weekly, starred review
âThe novel is written so well that the relentless and destructive rhythm of heroin abuse seems calming, metaphysical, and occasionally even funny. Sharmaâs descriptions are vivid and sage . . . lulling readers into a similarly opiate state to which they will readily succumb and from which, like the protagonist, it will take some time to recover. An absorbing novel carried by a seemingly hopeless protagonist you will want to befriend and save.â âKirkus
âJagged and hilarious and challenging and smart as hell.â âLiterary Hub
âSharma laces her prose with a particularly strong strain of dark humor, leaving elegant signatures on every page with the abandon of a drunk hostess whoâs been handed a blank prescription pad, granted immunity, and charged with a divine imperative to make sure everyone has a good time.â âThe Rumpus
âMayaâs inner world is raw and repulsive, but astutely rendered by Sharma. The book is simultaneously hard to read and hard to put down.â âPublishers Weekly
â[Mayaâs] problems could fill a bookâand in fact, they do, in a brisk, mordantly funny, fragmented narrative that is refreshingly honest, despite the fact that Maya is a liar.â âLos Angeles Times
âFunny and perfect.â âA.V. Club
â[Maya is] by turns raunchy, clever, spunky, sage, funny and forlorn as she barrels through the vicissitudes of a life of addiction grasping for an escape hatchâsuch a fresh voice that we canât help but hope she finds one. . . . Jade Sharmaâs debut novel of a young New York City junkie is on the money, harrowing, perspicacious, funny and somehow still uplifting.â âShelf Awareness
âJade Sharmaâs great gift is in how she makes the reader addicted to the addict.â âIndependent
âProblems is filled with sharp dialogue, perfectly crafted one-liners and succinct observations . . .â âThe Guardian
âProblems is, indeed, a funny book, but itâs hardly a comedy. It is brutal, sarcastic, often startling in its depictions of sex, sex work, drug use, and disordered eating habitsâbut these highlight rather than distract from the deep vulnerability at its core.â âNew Statesman
â. . . a rather tender novel in places, without being sentimental . . .â âSpectator
âItâs simultaneously hilarious, sexy, and heartbreaking.â âBustle
âProblems, told in fragments of Mayaâs thoughts, avoids the clichĂ©s of addiction and recovery narratives to speak to something dark, hilarious and deeply real.ââAutostraddle
âJade Sharmaâs debut is a darkly funny character study of an unhappy yet witty-as-hell woman whose self-destructive streak is as appalling as it is somehow understandable. Problems challenges readers to forget traditional redemption stories and yet to still find empathy for the messiest of heroines.â âEsquire
âProblems tells Mayaâs story of heroin abuse, personal flailing and recovery in raw, razor-sharp prose, painting an unromanticized yet witty and profound portrait of addiction.â âHuffPost
âMayaâs complex blend of vulnerability and ennui is enthralling, and her abiding fascination with bodiesâsex, sensations, shortcomingsâkeeps her commentary lively even as her life careens out of control. Given such diversions, itâs perhaps easy to miss the big picture: the invitation that Sharma is extending to readers to reimagine the possibilities for what a âheroin novelâ can be.â âCritical Mass
âThe end of Problems presents a glimmer of hope that she may finally be able to crawl out of it and evolve into the person she wants to be.â âStar Tribune
âRaw, unrepentant, and biting with dark humor, Problems turns the addiction-redemption narrative inside out, as Sharma follows heroin hobbyist Maya through her increasingly chaotic life after both the end of her marriage and an affair.â âPoets and Writers
âThe problem with Jade Sharmaâs novel, Problems, is that it ends. The narrator, Maya, is a hot mess with zero percent of her shit together, and yet as I got to know her through the Sharmaâs inventive narrative voice, I saw her asâor perhaps wanted her to beâmy friend.â âThe Rumpus
âMayaâs reflections on being Indian American when âthe whole world wants young white girlsâ do more to show the damage of internalized white supremacy than many of todayâs internet-published hot takes.â âBitch Magazine
âProblems is a book that wrestles with you; you will try to put it down but youâll be unsuccessful. And when you finish reading, it will feel like a masochistic act. But like any great character, Maya will linger with you, so you can struggle together.â âBust
âMaya, with her bodily neuroses and impulses and lusts and bolts of cleverly crafted philosophical insight, is the novel. And sheâs hard to stop watching and caring about and even, optimistically, rooting for. . . . A psychologically astute portrait of a womanâs cycle of addiction, the ebb and flow of her life around it, and her own hilarious, bittersweet and brilliant inner monologue through it all.â âHuffPost
âProblems unnerves in its facility to careen between acidic humor and frank depictions of desperation, as well as in its refusal to disavow completely the allure of the high.â âLiterary Hub
âProblems is a book that demands to be read in a gulp from its first sentence . . .â âBookends Review
âI love how raw this book is. Itâs very stream of consciousness, and itâs told with a mordant sense of humor too.â âWord of Mouth
âBinging and purging, a bad relationship with her MS-afflicted mother, a bad relationship with most people: Sharma smartly treats these as things to endure rather than as things to address.â âElectric Literature
â[Problems is] complex and unflinching, but itâs among those messy ruins of her self-made life that I found myself feeling oddly and genuinely uplifted.â âGuernica
âThereâs very little ease to start in Problems, a debut novel about addiction from the deceptively sober perspective of a bona fide anti-heroine.â âBookforum
âJade Sharmaâs Problems is one of the yearâs strongest debut novels, a powerful book that deals with addiction and gender politics through the eyes of its unforgettable and vividly drawn protagonist.â âLargehearted Boy
âFirst out of the gate for the new venture is the utterly ambitious and unique Problems, a debut novel from Jade Sharma that offers a disturbing, but also humorous, glimpse into heroin addiction and the end of a crumbling marriage. . . . Thanks to Sharmaâs quick, episodic style, Mayaâs fall from grace blisters off the page. Itâs electric writing.â âBrooklyn MagazineÂ
âFew books feel as honest as Problems, Jade Sharmaâs debut novel.â âThe Influence
âRest assured that Sharma succeeds in breaking every clichĂ© about redemption narratives.â âLargehearted Boy
âBold and honest, Problems is a fresh look at recovery, redemption, and one womanâs increasing nest of problems.â âBuzzFeed
âDark, funny, relentless.â âElle
âFew debuts manage to be as forceful and commanding as this one.â âRain Taxi
âBelieve it or not, it is possible to infuse a bit of wit into a novel about heroin addiction.â âStyleCaster
âUnsettling, aware, self-conscious, vivid, honest, gorgeousâProblems does it all, all while eschewing traditional expectations of story, plot, and character.â âVol. 1 Brooklyn
âProblems isnât your typical addiction story, because it isnât your typical narrator, written by someone who blows the usual heroin narratives out of the water. Sentence by sentence, it coils around you, then tightens. Itâs a compulsively readable trap.â âThe Fanzine
âSharma gives us Maya, a fresh voice. Sheâs vulgar, sheâs funny, sheâs bold, bawdy, insightful, and she has the voice of a woman, a twist to the usual heroin-narrative with thoughts and worries that are unique to women and to a womanâs experience with addiction.â âNewPages
âItâs a darkly funny tale of addiction, recovery, and redemption for every person, whether theyâre âlikeableâ or not. . . . Problems drags its readers so deep into Mayaâs psyche that you canât help but feel her self-consciousness, addiction, and pain.â âFusion
âOne of the best books Iâve read this year, if not one of the best books Iâve read in a long time. . . . A stunning novel.â âBook Riot Podcast
âThe voice is incredibly funny, offhandedly insightful, and captivating.â âLiterary Hub
âItâs a powerfully told novel, brisk and harrowing in equal measure.â âVol. 1 Brookly
âProblems is a novel of tragic souls and their predicaments that manages to be consistently hilarious and a rip-roaring read.â âIrish Times
ââSomewhere along the way, there stopped being new days,â reads the first sentence, and the bookâs structure echoes this repetitive flow of time, largely eschewing chapters and page breaks and instead allowing its narrative to develop through a series of short paragraphs. The result is a novel that carries the reader along with its protagonist on her uneven journey, making every descent along the way seem even more avoidable in hindsight.â âGoogle Play
âJade Sharma is the appalling, hilarious love child of Denis Johnson and Maggie Estep, and Problems is as unrepentant and transgressive a novel as they come. Every coming-of-age story except this one is a lie.â âElisa Albert
âSearing. Brutal. Sublime. Hysterical. Terrifying. Exacting. Essential. Indelible. Unforgettable.â âDale Peck
âThe self-degrading, self-knowing narrator of Jade Sharmaâs Problems dares to recount her beyond messy life in clean, lucidâand often funnyâprose. Sheâd never be so glib as to call herself a survivor, but even at this dark novelâs darkest moments her voice itself makes the case for her resilience and her humanity.â âDavid Gates
âProblems unnerves in its facility to careen between acidic humor and frank depictions of desperation, as well as in its refusal to disavow completely the allure of the high.â âLiterary Hub











