Kind of Kin
By (Author) Rilla Askew
Atlantic Books
Atlantic Books
28th May 2014
Main
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
813.6
Long-listed for IMPAC DUBLIN LITERARY AWARD 2014 (UK)
Paperback
432
Width 128mm, Height 198mm, Spine 26mm
289g
Your Grandpa is a felon and a Christian. He says he's a felon because he's a Christian.
So says Aunt Sweet to her nephew Dustin, when her father, who has been raising Dustin, is arrested for hiding migrant workers. The law that makes harbouring 'illegals' an offence is the brainchild of the ferociously ambitious Oklahoma politician Monica Moorehouse. Aunt Sweet takes Dustin in, but Dustin is bullied by her son, and so goes on the run, aided by an illegal the sheriffs didn't find.
Meanwhile, Sweet is asked by Dustin's married sister to hide her husband, a Mexican without papers. As Grandpa Brown holds fast to his beliefs and Dustin remains missing, Aunt Sweet fights to hold the family together, and to do what seems right.
In a gripping and compelling narrative, Kind of Kin lays bare the consequences of a law that exiles workers, turns friends into informers, and tears apart families. It also shows how some and ultimately a whole town - will unite to protect their own.
This story has a furious pulse... Askew paces her story masterfully. The reader turns the pages with a mounting sense of anticipation and dread... Explores with a deft hand and an unflinching moral vision the gray areas of an argument so often presented in black and white. * New York Times Book Review *
An impressive, witty and thought-provoking family saga * Red *
Rawboned, heartfelt and often funny... the author's delight in language abounds on every page... A tale of clashing values, emotions and powerful forces at stake ... Extraordinary * Huffington Post *
Rilla Askew's raucous, ebullient novel... gets to the very heart of what it means to be part of the family of man... Here, immigration has a human, heartbreaking face... Askew's characters are both larger than life and deeply, complicatedly human... powerful and moving * San Francisco Chronicle *
Kind of Kin is a kind of miracle. The character Sweet is an American original, doing her best to hold the family she loves together while trying not to fall apart. A winner. -- Adriana Trigiani, bestselling author of 'The Shoemaker's Wife'
Rich, rewarding, and humane * Publishers Weekly *
Rilla Askew has written three literary novels previously for which she received a 2009 Academy Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, was nominated for the PEN/Faulkner Award, the Dublin IMPAC Prize, and twice received the Oklahoma Book Award. Askew divides her time between upstate New York and Oklahoma.