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In the Upper Country: A Novel von Kai Thomas
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In the Upper Country: A Novel (Original 2023; 2024. Auflage)

von Kai Thomas (Autor)

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1165237,063 (3.72)10
"Traveling along the path of the Underground Railroad from Virginia to Michigan, from the Indigenous nations around the Great Lakes, to the Black refugee communities of Canada, In the Upper Country weaves together unlikely stories of love, survival, and familial upheaval that map the interconnected history of the peoples of North America in an entirely new and resonant way"--… (mehr)
Mitglied:John
Titel:In the Upper Country: A Novel
Autoren:Kai Thomas (Autor)
Info:Penguin Canada (2024), 352 pages
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In the Upper Country von Kai Thomas (2023)

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Beautifully written tale of the story of slavery intersecting with Native Americans and Canada
I loved the story telling device
At points it was hard to keep track of the myriad characters ( )
  MarshaKT | May 1, 2024 |
This book won the Atwood Gibson Writers' Trust Prize for fiction. I think it was deserving of that award.

Lensinda Martin is a young black woman who works in the (fictional) town of Dunmore which was settled by black people from the US. Lensinda works as a maid but also as a journalist for a black paper that her employer also contributes to. One evening Lensinda is asked to come to a farm outside of town and is told her services are needed. Since she also helps to care for and heal people she thinks someone on the farm is ill. Instead, she finds that the farmer has asked her to come because one of the fugitive slaves staying on his property has killed a bounty hunter who came looking for escaped slaves. The former slave is wants Lensinda to tell her story and what a story it is. But she also wants Lensinda to tell her about herself so the book is really an exchange of their histories. The old woman fled from a plantation in Virginia but before that she lived in Canada, including in the area where Dunmore is now located. But that was long ago; the land then was still Indigenous land. It takes many stories before Lensinda learns the name of the woman and her full history. When she does, the revelation has a profound effect on Lensinda.

This is Kai Thomas's first novel. Unlike a lot of first novels, I didn't think there was any excessive description or any unnecessary characters. And I loved the idea of telling the story by the exchange of stories. I hope Thomas has more books in him. ( )
  gypsysmom | Dec 21, 2023 |
Upper Country Underground
Review of the Viking hardcover original (January 10, 2023).

For nearly a decade now, refugees from slavery have been under the terror of the fugitive slave act, putting them in peril of their lives at every turn in their native land. This act has driven thousands into Canada, and now it is not only the fugitive but the fugitive hunter who makes bold incursions into British domain.


Shortlisted for the 2023 Atwood Gibson Writers' Trust Fiction Prize with the winner to be announced November 21, 2023.

This is an ambitious novel which covers a variety of little known history and sometimes secret history. It includes the settlements inhabited in Southwestern Ontario (called Upper Canada at the time) by both freeborn blacks and fugitive slaves from the U.S. south, slave hunters crossing borders in manhunts, the sometime bonds & mixed marriages between indigenous peoples and black canadians/americans, the War of 1812 and the alliance of Tecumseh's Native Confederacy and Britain against the United States, the slavery-era in Canada before it was banned, the Underground Railroad from the U.S. to Canada with actual underground cavern cities.

It is a challenge to take it all in, especially as it is not all told chronologically. It unfolds in the fictional town of Dunmore in 1859 (near Chatham, Ontario close to the Canada/U.S. Detroit border), where an elderly escaped slave-woman named Cash has been jailed for shooting an American slave-hunter who tried to capture her. A young woman reporter Lensinda (aka Sinda) is sent to the jail to get Cash's story for the local newspaper The Coloured Canadian. Cash will only reveal her story in exchange for stories from Sinda, and that is the setup for the rest of the book as the two woman trade tales which culminate in the discovery of their hidden personal connection.

I would have wanted to give this a 5 rating but it is the sprawling nature of it which makes for some difficulty in following along. I kept thinking about what could have been done further to give the reader a path to follow. A set of Family Trees or a List of Characters would have been a strong plus (this could have been placed at the back if some would have considered them spoilers). An index of the chronology of the stories within the chapters would also have made a big difference. These are all things that I picture doing in notations on a second read-through, so in a sense the reader has to do some of the editing themselves. Some will appreciate the challenge, but even if the whole picture doesn't come through clearly, the individual tales here are harrowing, terrifying and often desperate, with a peace still to be found at the end.

I read In the Upper Country through being introduced to it at the 2023 Lakefield Literary Festival.

See photograph at https://scontent-ord5-2.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t39.30808-6/361271558_24345228475075942_2...
Author Kai Thomas (right) in discussion with moderator John Barber (left) and author Waubgeshig Rice ("Moon of the Turning Leaves" (2023)) at the 2023 Lakefield Literary Festival, Canada.

Other Reviews
A Tree Planting Encounter Inspires Historical Black Fiction by Brett Josef Grubisic, Toronto Star, January 6, 2023.

Kai Thomas weaves myth and history in debut novel In the Upper Country, Emily Donaldson, Globe and Mail, February 2, 2023.

Trivia and Links
Author Kai Thomas is interviewed on NPR Radio, January 12, 2023 about the release of the book. You can read the transcript and listen to the audio.

As author Kai Thomas explains in his excellent Afterword, he was inspired to write this novel after learning about settlements similar to Dunmore in Southwestern Ontario. A likely inspiration is the town of Buxton (now North & South Buxton) near Chatham, Ontario. A photograph was another inspiration:
I came across a photograph of John “Daddy” Hall, a man of African and Indigenous descent who has an incredible story. He had fought in the War of 1812, been captured and survived decades of slavery in Kentucky, and escaped all the way up to Owen Sound, Ontario, where he became the town crier and lived to be over 115 years old. It was a story that brought together several corners of history I had never truly examined: black-native alliances in slavery-era Canada, Indigenous sovereignty, the Underground Railroad, and the politics of free black settlement.
( )
  alanteder | Oct 7, 2023 |
I love the way the stories of the protagonists weave and connect. I'm fond of the old women we meet. History is shown on a human level, where even those caught in its cruel grip find ways to take their lives into their own hands. ( )
  GailNyoka | Jan 27, 2023 |
One doesn't really enjoy a book like this, dark as it is, but one can say that it's incredibly evocative. Thomas brings to life the free black people in Canada, and their constant fear of slave catchers coming across the border. The story centers around Lensinda, a young black journalist tasked with collecting their stories, and Cash, an escaped slave who kills one of the bounty hunters sent to recapture her.

Cash won't reveal her full story unless Lensinda swaps stories of her own. As the two share stories of slave life and free life, with some mythology mixed in, Lensinda slowly learns that perhaps the answer to why Cash chose to kill the bounty hunter (and it was a choice) isn't the most important thing about Cash's life. Both tales jump around in time, and can be somewhat hard to follow as there are few textual clues to mark the shifts in time, making this a challenging book to read on an already challenging subject. For those with the foritude to track the story, though, it's a worthwhile addition to genre.

FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review. ( )
  mzonderm | Jan 9, 2023 |
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I got to be quite hardy-quite used to water and bushwhacking; so that by the time I got to Canada, I could handle an ax or hoe or anything.
Mrs. John Little
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"Traveling along the path of the Underground Railroad from Virginia to Michigan, from the Indigenous nations around the Great Lakes, to the Black refugee communities of Canada, In the Upper Country weaves together unlikely stories of love, survival, and familial upheaval that map the interconnected history of the peoples of North America in an entirely new and resonant way"--

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