
Names Have Been Changed
A Novel
$60.41
- Hardcover
272 pages
- Release Date
23 June 2026
Summary
INTERNATIONAL BESTSELLER
One of NPR’s 15 Books Our Critics Can’t Wait for This Summer One of Debutiful’s Most Anticipated Debut Books of 2026 One of E! News’s Books to Read This Summer One of Marie Claire’s Best Mystery-Thriller Books of 2026 One of BookRiot’s Best Mysteries and Thrillers for True Crime Podcast Listeners One of Electric Lit’s Most Anticipated Books by Women of Color for Summer and Fall 2026 One of Kirkus’s 40 Hottest Reads for Summer 2026
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Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9798217176595 |
|---|---|
| Author: | Yu-Mei Balasingamchow |
| Publisher: | Random House USA Inc |
| Imprint: | Tiny Reparations Books |
| Format: | Hardcover |
| Number of Pages: | 272 |
| Release Date: | 23 June 2026 |
| Weight: | 449g |
| Dimensions: | 235mm x 160mm |
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What They're Saying
Critics Review
“This picaresque is off to a rocking start, the first-person narration is charmingly self-effacing, and the story promises depth as well, exploring the emotional toll of being a fugitive.”
—NPR, 15 Books Our Critics Can’t Wait For This Summer
“I first read Balasingamchow’s book last July, and I have been thinking about it ever since. Ophir is one of the most memorable characters to jump off the page and the inevitable Hollywood adaptation will have actresses chomping at the bit to play this role… Names Have Been Changed is crackling with energy.”
—Adam Vitcavage, Debutiful
“This fast-paced debut follows Ophir, who experiences a petty crime spun out of control leading to the estrangement of her family and home in Singapore… Her constant dislocation and consistent reexamination of identity show us the grueling complications of building a life and home.”
—Electric Lit, The Most Anticipated Books by Women of Color for Summer and Fall 2026
”[Ophir’s] story is as compelling as it is unsettling, drawing you into her choices and their consequences. She’s a fascinatingly messy protagonist — part anti-hero, part adversary, part spoiled and sympathetic — the kind you may not like but can’t stop listening to.”
—The Southern Bookseller Review
“This thrilling narrative takes us through London, Tokyo, and America with the story of an immigrant who is on the run from a crime she never set out to commit. Ophir’s fearless voice and her courage to find her next exciting adventure takes us far from home, and yet brings us back to the people we have grown up loving.”
—Chicago Review of Books
“I can’t remember the last time a character gripped me as hard as Ophir did. Exciting, sharp, at times fun and at other times heartbreaking, Ophir held my heart in her hands and I was only too happy to give it to her.”
—Jesse Q. Sutanto, USA Today bestselling author of Vera Wong’s Unsolicited Advice for Murderers
“With style and verve, Names Have Been Changed puts a sparkling new spin on the migration narrative. Ophir’s gutsy and absorbing confessional will draw you in.”
—Lisa Ko, national bestselling author of Memory Piece and The Leavers
“Names Have Been Changed is a brave debut. It tells a migrant story, specifically a unique aspect of the migrant experience, namely a constant escape from the past in order to seek an existence on one’s own terms. The novel is ingeniously conceived and written in an intelligent, fierce style. It’s a fine contribution to migrant literature of our time.”
—Ha Jin, bestselling author of the National Book Award winner Waiting
“A stylish, original, and unexpected debut. Reading Names Have Been Changed feels like sitting down for brunch with your coolest friend.” —Grace D. Li, New York Times bestselling author of Portrait of a Thief
“Names Have Been Changed is a spiky, smart story about an itinerant Singaporean ex-con who yearns above all, to return. It’s a book about displacement, friendship, diaspora, love, and criminal enterprise, but above all, the gasping need for connection, when home is out of reach.”
—Vanessa Chan, international bestselling author of The Storm We Made
“An utterly original thieves’ confession you won’t be able to put down.”
—Kirkus, starred review
“A thrilling narrative full of hairpin turns and complex questions…. Ophir is an endlessly companiable narrator despite her patently unreliable version of events, which careens like a roller coaster from one scrape, mistake, or escape to the next. It’s a blast.”
—Publishers Weekly
“A novel that keeps gaining force.”
—Booklist
About The Author
Yu-Mei Balasingamchow
Yu-Mei Balasingamchow was born in Singapore and moved to Boston. She was a bookseller at Papercuts Bookshop and teaches writing workshops at GrubStreet. Her short fiction has received a Pushcart Prize special mention and been shortlisted for the Commonwealth Prize. She has an MFA in creative writing from Boston University and has received grants from the Elizabeth George Foundation, Sewanee Writers Conference, and Singapore’s National Arts Council. Names Have Been Changed is her debut novel.
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