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222 pages, Kindle Edition
First published April 14, 2020
subduction: n, the action or process in plate tectonics of the edge of one crustal plate descending below the edge of another.Subduction is a truly impressive debut, with controlled, poetic prose, and an almost mannered way of depicting tradition, marginalization, and the human longing to belong—all with the natural world at its center.
Rocks below the tide-line held in their wakes braided rivers of outflow whose patterns replicated flood-furrowed land east of here, ravages of the last ice age.As Christian Keifer puts it in his review in The Paris Review:
The title of the book refers to the geological phenomenon of one tectonic plate sinking under the influence of another, during which both subsumed and overriding plates are wracked by distortion and disruption. In Young’s novel, the answer to which is which is left beautifully unclear.And this is resoundingly true. Even the structure of the novel is controlled yet racing toward an inevitable collision; in a less talented writer’s hand, Subduction would have veered off into explications, tangible either/ors, but Young keeps her novel’s focus so taut and almost cosmological that it’s not only a gem, but it’s a near masterpiece of now, and a haunting case study of longing and belonging:
Who is at peace with the daylight between who we are and who we thought we’d be?Highly recommended: this marks the beginning of a literary career well worth following along.