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My Mother's House

A novel

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
0 of 1 copy available
One of the Best Books of the Year: Elle, Harper’s Bazaar, Vulture • This uncompromising look at the immigrant experience, and the depravity of one man, is an electrifying page-turner rooted in a magical reality “Impossible to stop reading” —Vulture
When Lucien flees Haiti with his wife, Marie-Ange, and their three children to New York City’s South Ozone Park, he does so hoping for reinvention, wealth, and comfort. He buys a run-down house in a quickly changing community, and begins life anew. Lucien and Marie-Ange call their home La Kay—“my mother’s house”—and it becomes a place where their fellow immigrants can find peace, a good meal, and necessary legal help. But as a severely emotionally damaged man emigrating from a country whose evils he knows to one whose evils he doesn’t, Lucien soon falls into his worst habits and impulses, with La Kay as the backdrop for his lasciviousness.
What he can’t begin to fathom is that the house is watching, passing judgment, and deciding to put an end to all the sins it has been made to hold. But only after it has set itself aflame will frightened whispers reveal Lucien’s ultimate evil.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 23, 2020
      Momplaisir’s provocative debut unearths the secrets and dark desires of a Haitian immigrant family man living in an anthropomorphic house in Queens, N.Y. In 1960s Port-au-Prince, 24-year-old brothel bouncer Lucien Louverture marries 15-year-old Marie-Ange Calvert after he protects her during an attempted coup. They quickly have three daughters, and he moves them all to the U.S. when the girls are still babies. The house he buys possesses humanlike desires and memory (“The House had been hopeful that would bring warmth and harmony to smoke out like burned sage the evil and sadness that had been left behind by its previous gangster head of household”). Initially, the house, which calls itself La Kay, is a hub of activity, with Marie-Ange cooking for the neighborhood’s diverse immigrant community, but La Kay grows horrified by Lucien’s habits of spying on his wife and daughters. After Marie-Ange dies at 40, La Kay determines to kill Lucien by setting itself on fire. Lucien escapes the inferno, but is desperate to rescue his “girls.” The neighbors, knowing his grown daughters have moved out, assume he’s senile, but gradually the reader—and La Kay—discover the harrowing details of Lucien’s secret basement room where he traps girls and women. Momplaisir’s arresting take on the abuse of male power will long haunt the reader. Agent: Victoria Sanders, Victoria Sanders & Assoc.

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  • English

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