Lidia Yuknavitch is the nationally bestselling author of the novels The Book of Joan, The Small Backs of Children, and Dora: A Headcase, the story collection Verge, and the memoir The Chronology of Water. She is the recipient of two Oregon Book Awards and has been a finalist for the Brooklyn Public Library Literary Prize and the PEN Center USA Creative Nonfiction Award. She lives in Portland, Oregon.
Praise for Thrust: [The] most mind-blowing book about America I've ever inhaled. . . . I read Thrust in a state of flustered fascination and finished longing to dream it again. -Ron Charles, Washington Post 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. -Alexandra Jacobs, The New York Times Yuknavitch breaks down barriers of time and space, of history and language, in a visceral critique of America's founding ideals and its present failures. -The New Yorker Thrust is the culmination of everything she has been writing toward, a blistering excoriation of power structures that also honors the resilience of those who fight back. . . . It's a book that uses history and America as a jumping-off point to dissolve borders and boundaries. -Michele Filgate, Los Angeles Times Moving and incisive. -Time A fascinating, unsettling ride. -The Guardian [This] powerful, braided fable unites workers of the world across time and space and class to start conceiving of a better world. . . . Yuknavitch is firmly in control. -Los Angeles Times The utterly gripping story of a drowned world . . . I read with wonder, sometimes also with tears, and always with hope for our own hurting world. I feel fierce admiration for what Yuknavitch has achieved in this amazing book. -Barbara J. King, author of How Animals Grieve Complex, enthralling . . . page-turning . . An epic story of dystopia and hope, and ultimately about the power of storytelling. -Sarah Neilson, Shondaland An epic fable [that] operates more like a poem. -Kate Dwyer, The New York Times Cinematic and inviting . . . it could be the best thing you read this year. -Philadelphia Inquirer A dizzily interlacing view of American history. -New York [A] forceful, fluid, erotic new novel. -Boston Globe A dazzling new novel that marks another imaginative feat in a career with no shortage of them. A lyrical and dexterous critique of a future America ravaged by climate change and surveillance, Thrust is both of the moment and utterly timeless. -Chicago Review of Books Prescient, elegiac, and epic. . . . This book is a mighty lament for what we are losing; it's also a proposition about what we might become, how we might learn to listen differently, and how water rearranges things, including history. -The Irish Times 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 A stunningly beautiful novel about the power of storytelling to make sense of the world we are living in and the one we might just be barreling toward. -The Daily Beast An intelligently affecting story that successfully walks the fine line between topical issues, history and science fiction. -Buzz A book that explores the big, serious issues of exploitation, climate change, and freedom through a rich web of kink, humor, and nature. There's so much going on in this novel, and it all comes together in such magnificent, incredible ways. -BookRiot Chronicles violences big and small that have shaped the course of humanity [and] offers hope in the idea that stories, ever-changing, have the power to carry Laisve-and others-somewhere new. -Electric Literature [Yuknavitch]'s world-building powers are in full force. -LitHub A complex novel of great imagination. . . profound, thought-provoking, and deeply beautiful. -Shelf Awareness Blistering and visionary . . . This is the author's best yet. -Publishers Weekly (starred review) Thrust is kinky, queer, and razor sharp . . . a stunning novel about the future we might be able to create if we listen to voices we've previously ignored . . . and about being willing to start again. -Booklist (starred review) 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. . . . Complex, ambitious, and unafraid to earnestly love-and critique-America and its most dearly held principles. -Kirkus Reviews Thrust is alarmingly trenchant-and a hell of a wild ride. Daring, dazzling, and earth-splitting, this is a book to take in wide-eyed. -Rebecca Makkai, author of The Great Believers