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Laisve is a refugee in a destroyed city-island, hunted in Raids and haunted by the spirits of her drowned mother and brother. She dives into the river and finds herself travelling between times and waterways that will connect her with people from the past and future. Among them are a group of workers constructing a colossal monument to freedom for a young and bustling nation. But exactly what - and whom - will that liberty represent?
As Laisve drifts into their histories, she schools seekers in the ways of dreams, love and the ultimate aim of liberty: to free the next generation from the chains of this one.
Laisve is a refugee in a destroyed city-island, hunted in Raids and haunted by the spirits of her drowned mother and brother. She dives into the river and finds herself travelling between times and waterways that will connect her with people from the past and future. Among them are a group of workers constructing a colossal monument to freedom for a young and bustling nation. But exactly what - and whom - will that liberty represent?
As Laisve drifts into their histories, she schools seekers in the ways of dreams, love and the ultimate aim of liberty: to free the next generation from the chains of this one.
Lidia Yuknavitch is the internationally bestselling author of the novels The Book of Joan,The Small Backs of Children and Dora: A Headcase, and of the memoir The Chronology of Water. She is the recipient of two Oregon Book Awards and has been a finalist for the PEN Center USA Creative Nonfiction Award. She lives in Portland, Oregon.@LidiaYuknavitch | lidiayuknavitch.net
'A long, disturbing dream . . . a fascinating, unsettling ride' -
Guardian
'There's so much that feels deeply present about Yuknavitch's
latest novel: the ever-expanding police state, lower Manhattan
under water and a woman on a mission to rescue other vulnerable
women. Yuknavitch's words are incantations, and Thrust is a
triumph' - Elle
'An indignant and impressive novel' - New York Times
'Moving and incisive' - Time
'This weirdly wonderful [novel] on the surveillance state, climate
change, and what it means to have agency as a woman in the world
will throw your mind for a loop in the best way' - Good
Housekeeping
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