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UPCOUNTRY by Chin-Sun Lee

UPCOUNTRY

by Chin-Sun Lee

Pub Date: Nov. 7th, 2023
ISBN: 9781951213770
Publisher: Unnamed Press

Lee debuts with a sometimes eerie, sometimes pragmatic story about three women whose lives intersect in a small upstate New York town during the Great Recession.

Hoping for a new start with her troubled husband, childless Manhattan attorney Claire Pedersen, 43, buys an old house in Caliban in 2009. The reluctant seller, April Ives, whose great-grandfather built the place, is currently a cash-strapped single mother who cleans other people’s houses for a living. When Claire’s husband develops a “fetish” for Anna, a pregnant young Korean American woman belonging to the local branch of an otherwise white Christian cult, tragedy results. Over the next two years, the three women, all outsiders in their communities, crisscross paths as their fortunes alter and each considers the role of luck (especially bad luck), choice, and God’s role in life’s vicissitudes. Claire initially discounts April as a loser, but then Claire’s own life unravels. Having lost her husband, her financial stability, and her health, she feels a growing empathy for April’s hand-to-mouth struggles. But unlike Claire, April finds reserves of inner strength while facing crises concerning her young son and his ex-con father. She also forms an unexpected bond with Anna, who is suddenly forced to question the strict, narrow religious world in which she’s grown up and finds herself re-evaluating her beliefs while discovering the strength of genuine love and trust. Lee’s first novel is refreshingly out of sync with current trends; she manages to engage readers without relying on a big plot hook or trendy issue, and her point-of-view remains disquietingly ambiguous. Are the hints of the supernatural at work merely in the characters’ minds? Should Anna’s earnest theology be taken seriously? Readers may wonder at times where the open-ended plot is going, and the ending, while logical and satisfying, is not predictable. Life these days seldom is—which may be the novel’s ultimate message.

An engrossing, quietly original take on what women must do to survive in 21st-century small-town America.