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THRUST by Lidia Yuknavitch

THRUST

by Lidia Yuknavitch

Pub Date: June 28th, 2022
ISBN: 978-0-525-53490-7
Publisher: Riverhead

A girl living in a dystopian future travels through time via water.

Young Laisvė has seen more in her life than most adults. By the time she’s a preteen, she’s watched her mother be killed as her family attempted to flee from Siberia by sea; later, on a boat trip to see the Statue of Liberty (now largely below water), someone snatches her infant brother. Left with just her father, Laisvė must endure what she calls “The Hiding,” living furtively in a small apartment in a ruined New York City and dodging the people-snatching operations known as “the Raids.” One evening, when a Raid team comes knocking, Laisvė must put a tightly planned escape plan into action. But rather than head to a safe house, as she and her father had agreed, Laisvė has a secret. She’s seen her mother underwater, and she’s received instructions to travel to the past through the water, seeking out specific people. For what purpose, Laisvė is not told, but she sets off on a journey that will take her from a disabled sex worker in Victorian-era New York to a teen boy in a detention center with ties to Timothy McVeigh, and from the laborers who built the Statue of Liberty to the daughter of a European war criminal. Yuknavitch, as ever, is a maximalist, but the book wisely uses Laisvė (whose name means freedom in Lithuanian) as a kind of conduit through which many other narratives flow. Ultimately, Yuknavitch is interested in the way the bodies of immigrants, refugees, and marginalized people have been the fodder used to keep the American project going—and her humane love for those same bodies shines out everywhere through the extravagant prose.

Complex, ambitious, and unafraid to earnestly love—and critique—America and its most dearly held principles.