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Lake City

A Novel

Thomas Kohnstamm

$32.99

Paperback

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English
Counterpoint
08 January 2019
The setting is Seattle's Lake City neighborhood during the 2001 holiday season. In the wake of the 9/11 tragedy and at the peak of Seattle's first wave of tech-boom gentrification - a wave that never quite made it to his neighborhood - Lane Beuche schemes how to win back his wife (and her trust fund). In his childhood bedroom in his mother's decrepit old house, the idealistic but self-serving striver Lane licks his wounds and hatches a plot.

He discovers a precarious path forward when he is contracted by a wealthy adoptive couple to seduce and sabotage a troubled birth mother from his neighborhood. Lane soon finds himself in a zero-sum game between the families as he straddles two cultures, classes, and worlds. Until finally, with the well-being of the toddler at stake, Lane must choose between wanting to do the right thing (if he could only figure out what that is) and reclaiming the life of privilege he so recently had and, he feels, so richly deserves.

'Lake City is a darkly funny and extremely relevant debut novel about American inequality and moral authority, featuring a sad-sack antihero who takes way too long to grow up. When he finally does, the results are beautiful, and the book ultimately becomes an elegy for a now-gone Seattle, and a lesson in how the place we're from never fully lets us go.' - Anthony Doerr, author of All the Light We Cannot See

'Snarky social commentary on the world of Seattle have-nots.' - Kirkus Reviews

By:  
Imprint:   Counterpoint
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 209mm,  Width: 139mm, 
ISBN:   9781640091429
ISBN 10:   1640091424
Pages:   320
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

THOMAS KOHNSTAMM was born and raised in Seattle. He is the author of the memoir Do Travel Writers Go to Hell? and writes for a variety of video and animation series. Lake City is his first novel. He lives in Seattle with his wife and two children.

Reviews for Lake City: A Novel

Praise for Lake City A caustic satire on class privilege and deprivation . . . Along with steeping you in the sodden, bone-chilling back streets of Lake City, Kohnstamm serves up historical background on the neighborhood and even tosses in a capsule corporate history of Fred Meyer for good measure . . . The portrait Kohnstamm offers of a Seattle backwater trailing in the wake of the Emerald City's rising glamour is indelible. --Michael Upchurch, The Seattle Times I love Thomas Kohnstamm for writing a whole book set in Lake City. Someone had to. Someone had to make something of the in-between area known for its car dealerships, its strip club, its sub sandwich shop, and its couple of bars. A place that doesn't even know if it's a lake or a city or a city of lakes. In Kohnstamm's debut novel, a semi-shitty guy named Lane Beuche has fallen on hard times. He's lost his wife, he's living in his mom's house, and he thinks he deserves the life of privilege from which he's been unceremoniously banished. Watch him climb out of the hole he dug for himself, and enjoy the elegy for old Seattle along the way. --Rich Smith, The Stranger An intelligent, darkly comic page turner . . . Parts of it read like outtakes from Jonathan Franzen's The Corrections or Jess Walter's The Financial Lives of Poets . . . Kohnstamm has a zippy sense of plot and a fine eye for detail. --Stefan Milne, Seattle Met Kohnstamm's book takes you into the heart of this usually ignored corner of Northeast Seattle and lucidly portrays the grit of Lake City Way, its trailer parks, its dive bars, and, most vividly, its Fred Meyer. --Lester Black, The Stranger This is a book that embraces Gary Snyder's unofficial title as 'The Poet of Lake City.' Hell, the very first page of the story reads like a poem praising the strip malls and run-down garages of Lake City Way . . . Lake City is a story as pugnacious and as charming as its protagonist . . . Kohnstamm may be concerned with recreating a Seattle of a different time, but he insists on engaging modern Seattle in a deep conversation. --Paul Constant, The Seattle Review of Books The Fred Meyer scenes are glorious . . . Kohnstamm is at his best when he's sending up a special kind of virtue-signaling liberal who claims to live their life in constant service to the oppressed, but who doesn't actually do anything for them . . . Local readers will likely enjoy the familiar locations and scraps of lore. --Rich Smith, The Stranger All at once hip, intrepid, and philosophical . . . Kohnstamm's fresh voice has a millennial groove, the story is engaging and gritty, and there's an impressive scrutiny of personal and societal ethics. --Publishers Weekly Snarky social commentary on the world of Seattle have-nots. --Kirkus Reviews Lake City is a darkly funny and extremely relevant debut novel about American inequality and moral authority, featuring a sad-sack antihero who takes way too long to grow up. When he finally does, the results are beautiful, and the book ultimately becomes an elegy for a now-gone Seattle, and a lesson in how the place we're from never fully lets us go. --Anthony Doerr, author of All the Light We Cannot See Kohnstamm delivers a blistering, clear-eyed, and surefooted debut novel about the perils and pitfalls of misdirected ambition. More than that, Lake City is a hilarious and sneakily incisive examination of the cultural tensions, and widening class divides that simmer on the fringes of an increasingly homogenized Seattle--or San Francisco, or Brooklyn, or Los Angeles, or any other American city in the throes of affluenza and gentrification. --Jonathan Evison, author of Lawn Boy Kohnstamm has written a novel of Pale Male Fail above and below the poverty line, a Dickensian tale of a fledgling philosopher who's taken flight from trailer parks to Gramercy Park and then . . . had his wings clipped. This is the American Dream cut thin on a grocery store meat slicer, laced with oxy, stolen booze, and an unfinished dissertation. It's a rotgut to Dom P rignon rainbow, which is to say: Lake City is a crucial black comedy about the myths of money and happiness, and whether nature, nurture, or AmEx rears a better man. --Maria Dahvana Headley, New York Times-bestselling author of The Mere Wife There are so many reasons to admire Thomas Kohnstamm's astonishing debut novel: his astute and cutting depiction of urban gentrification, his pitch-perfect evocation of a young man's endless ricochet between self-aggrandizement and self-hatred, his vision of Seattle's grungy underside that is so richly related one can almost smell the cedar and cannabis wafting off the pages. And yet, it is Kohnstamm's innate storytelling verve--his taut, noirish knack for plotting and his ability to make the reader laugh, cringe, worry, and feel for his characters all at once-- that makes Lake City truly unputdownable. --Stefan Merrill Block, author of Oliver Loving: A Novel Kohnstamm knowingly illuminates the underbelly of Seattle--a place of beater cars, strip clubs, and a subpar hypermarket--far from the hipsters and gentrifiers. Hilarious as it is cutting, Lake City offers an all-too-insightful critique of clashing classes and misguided ideas of success. --Shari Goldhagen, author of In Some Other World, Maybe How many things can go wrong when you try to straddle the line between two economically defined classes in the lovely city of Seattle, Washington, just after the tragic events of 9/11? Lane just wants his wife back (along with her money, of course) but getting into her good graces won't be easy. When he's drawn into a scheme to trick a young birth mother in his neighborhood, he thinks it will be a quick step back to the life he's after. But things often don't go the way we expect. Eventually, he's forced to admit that something has to give, and he can't ignore the needs of the small child that has been caught in this web of intrigue. This is a beautifully crafted debut novel from a man whose writing Jonathan Evison calls 'clear-eyed' and 'blistering.' I couldn't agree more. --Linda Bond, Auntie's Bookstore (Spokane, WA) Praise for Thomas Kohnstamm A comic rogue who seems to have modeled his life and prose on Hunter S. Thompson's. --The New York Times Kohnstamm is one to watch. --Kirkus Reviews Praise for Do Travel Writers Go to Hell? A comic rogue who seems to have modeled his life and prose on Hunter S. Thompson's . . . I could not get enough of the most depraved travel book of the year. --The New York Times Hilarious. --The New York Times Book Review The shot heard 'round the travel world... --The Washington Post It's Upton Sinclair's The Jungle, but with tourism... [Lonely Planet CEO] Ms. Slatyer made Mr. Kohnstamm's book sound dangerous. --The New York Observer Kohnstamm is nobody's model travel journalist, except maybe Hunter Thompson's... [he's the] sudden enfant terrible of his field... Do Travel Writers Go To Hell? is the best-written, funniest book of travel literature since Phaic Tan. --The Philadelphia Inquirer [Kohnstamm]'s the first to blow the whistle on the travel industry's dirty little secret. --T Magazine, The Moment blog, The New York Times Thomas Kohnstamm's raw portrayal of life as a young, broke travel writer in South America... A must-read for any backpacker--future, past, or present. --Outside The colorful adventures of a budding travel writer in Brazil... a wonderfully picaresque journey through the vibrant Brazilian landscape . . . Readers will relish the countless stories of the author's misadventures, but Kohnstamm brings more than just anecdotes: He offers a solid understanding of the mechanics of the travel-writing industry and a unique ability to illuminate that world to readers. Notable for its spirited prose and insightful exploration of the less-romantic side of travel writing. Kohnstamm is one to watch. --Kirkus Reviews (starred review)


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