Too Asian, Not Asian Enough is a highly provocative collection of short stories which question the identity of British Asian writing and open up the floor for ripe debate. Seeking to break away from the stultifying and now tired confines of stereotypical British Asian narratives, from arranged marriages to alienation in a strange English island, editor Kavita Bhanot aims to harness the voices of a new generation of authors to paint a fresh portrait. The result is a compellingly refreshing and sensitive selection of stories, which are juxtaposed against each other to great effect, not only in tone but most evidently in geographic scale, from the heart of New York and mountainous rural European communities to gay night clubs in Manchester. Favourite stories which stood out for me included the biting prose of Rajeev Balasubramanyam's The Tablet of Bliss, in which David Beckham, that iconic embodiment of Britishness meets his doom in a world turned on its head. I also loved the simultaneously comedic and sad Windows by Madhvi Ramani, a bittersweet discourse on loneliness in old age.