Current:Home > ScamsBook excerpt: "The Morningside" by Téa Obreht -FinanceMind
Book excerpt: "The Morningside" by Téa Obreht
EchoSense View
Date:2025-04-10 10:26:20
We may receive an affiliate commission from anything you buy from this article.
"The Morningside" (Random House) is the latest novel by Téa Obreht (the New York Times bestselling author of "The Tiger's Wife" and "Inland"), set in a future metropolis ravaged by climate change.
Read an excerpt below.
"The Morningside" by Téa Obreht
$26 at AmazonPrefer to listen? Audible has a 30-day free trial available right now.
Try Audible for freeLong ago, before the desert, when my mother and I first arrived in Island City, we moved to a tower called the Morningside, where my aunt had already been serving as superintendent for about ten years.
The Morningside had been the jewel of an upper-city neighborhood called Battle Hill for more than a century. Save for the descendants of a handful of its original residents, however, the tower was, and looked, deserted. It reared above the park and the surrounding townhomes with just a few lighted windows skittering up its black edifice like notes of an unfinished song, here-and-there brightness all the way to the thirty third floor, where Bezi Duras's penthouse windows blazed, day and night, in all directions.
By the time we arrived, most people, especially those for whom such towers were intended, had fled the privation and the rot and the rising tide and gone upriver to scattered little freshwater townships. Those holding fast in the city belonged to one of two groups: people like my aunt and my mother and me, refuge seekers recruited from abroad by the federal Repopulation Program to move in and sway the balance against total urban abandonment, or the stalwart handful of locals hanging on in their shrinking neighborhoods, convinced that once the right person was voted into the mayor's office and the tide pumps got working again, things would at least go back to the way they had always been.
The Morningside had changed hands a number of times and was then in the care of a man named Popovich. He was from Back Home, in the old country, which was how my aunt had come to work for him.
Ena was our only living relative—or so I assumed, because she was the only one my mother ever talked about, the one in whose direction we were always moving as we ticked around the world. As a result, she had come to occupy valuable real estate in my imagination. This was helped by the fact that my mother, who never volunteered intelligence of any kind, had given me very little from which to assemble my mental prototype of her. There were no pictures of Ena, no stories. I wasn't even sure if she was my mother's aunt, or mine, or just a sort of general aunt, related by blood to nobody. The only time I'd spoken to her, when we called from Paraiso to share the good news that our Repopulation papers had finally come through, my mother had waited until the line began to ring before whispering, "Remember, her wife just died, so don't forget to mention Beanie," before thrusting the receiver into my hand. I'd never even heard of the wife, this "Beanie" person, until that very moment.
Excerpt from "The Morningside" by Téa Obreht, copyright © 2024 by Téa Obreht. Used by permission of Random House, an imprint of Random House Group, a division of Penguin Random House, LLC. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Get the book here:
"The Morningside" by Téa Obreht
$26 at Amazon $26 at Barnes & NobleBuy locally from Bookshop.org
For more info:
"The Morningside" by Téa Obreht (Random House), in Hardcover, Large Print Trade Paperback, eBook and Audio formats
veryGood! (46777)
Related
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- The Daily Money: Hate speech on Facebook?
- A 6th house has collapsed into the Atlantic Ocean along North Carolina’s Outer Banks
- Ohio man gets probation after pleading guilty to threatening North Caroilna legislator
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Massachusetts fugitive dubbed the ‘bad breath rapist’ captured in California after 16 years at large
- Why Jana Kramer Feels “Embarrassment” Ahead of Upcoming Wedding to Allan Russell
- Remains found at base of Flagstaff’s Mount Elden identified as man reported missing in 2017
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Bronny James to remain in NBA draft, agent Rich Paul says ahead of deadline
Ranking
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Elon Musk offers Tesla investors factory tours to bolster $56B pay package votes
- Quality early education can be expensive or hard to find. Home visits bring it to more families
- Open AI CEO Sam Altman and husband promise to donate half their wealth to charity
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- California beach reopens after closing when shark bumped surfer off surfboard: Reports
- The Beatles' 'Love' closes July 6. Why Ringo Starr says 'it’s worth seeing' while you can
- Jason and Kylie Kelce Receive Apology From Margate City Mayor After Heated Fan Interaction
Recommendation
Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
2 climbers suffering from hypothermia await rescue off Denali, North America’s tallest mountain
Lawsuit alleges racial harassment at a Maine company that makes COVID-19 swabs
Researchers find a tiny organism has the power to reduce a persistent greenhouse gas in farm fields
'Most Whopper
Trump’s hush money case has gone to the jury. What happens now?
Israel says it’s taken control of key area of Gaza’s border with Egypt awash in smuggling tunnels
Joe Jonas Seemingly References Sophie Turner Breakup on New Song