Block Seventeen, Kimiko Guthrie
Block Seventeen, Kimiko Guthrie
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Block Seventeen

Author: Kimiko Guthrie

Narrator: Natalie Naudus

Unabridged: 9 hr 58 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 06/23/2020


Synopsis

Akiko “Jane” Thompson, a half-Japanese, half-Caucasian woman in her midthirties, is attempting to forge a quietly happy life in the Bay Area with her fiancé, Shiro. But after a bizarre car accident, things begin to unravel. An intruder ransacks their apartment but takes nothing, leaving behind only cryptic traces of his or her presence. Shiro, obsessed with government surveillance, risks their security in a plot to expose the misdeeds of his employer, the TSA. Jane’s mother has seemingly disappeared, her existence only apparent online. Jane wants to ignore these worrisome disturbances until a cry from the past robs her of all peace, forcing her to uncover a long-buried family trauma.As Jane searches for her mother, she confronts her family’s fraught history in America. She learns how the incarceration of Japanese Americans fractured her family, and how persecution and fear can drive a person to commit desperate acts.In melodic and suspenseful prose, Guthrie leads the reader to and from the past, through an unreliable present, and, inescapably, toward a shocking revelation. Block Seventeen, at times playful and light, at others disturbing and disorienting, explores how fear of the “other” continues to shape our minds and distort our world.

About Kimiko Guthrie

Kimiko Guthrie is the cofounder of Dandelion Dancetheater and a lecturer at Cal State East Bay. She holds an MFA in choreography from Mills College. She lives intergenerationally in the Bay Area with her husband, kids, and parents. Block Seventeen, which was inspired by her experience growing up with a mother who was incarcerated in a Japanese American internment camp, is her first novel.

About Natalie Naudus

Natalie Naudus is one of the most beloved audiobook narrators working today and now author of her debut novel, Gay the Pray Away.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Joseph on March 31, 2021

Akiko Thompson, the narrator in Kimiko Guthrie’s debut novel Block Seventeen, is the daughter of a Japanese-American mother and a white American father. Just like her mother, she is not particularly keen on her Asian heritage, so much so that in her teenage years she gave up the name “Akiko” for the......more

Goodreads review by Claire on April 15, 2020

Reading Block 17 sent me back to reread Murakami’s The Windup Bird Chronicles. In both of these books, there is an interpenetration of the dream world and the waking world that is so complete that trying to understand what “really” happened is no longer relevant. The conscious world is not privilege......more

Goodreads review by Kristen on June 20, 2020

Do not be confused: this is not a "thriller", as I went into this book thinking. It is rather a surreal, psychological study of history and cycles of familial trauma. I usually spend the next paragraph of my reviews providing a brief summary of the book, but for this one, I don't think I can say any......more

Goodreads review by Keana on March 06, 2020

Block Seventeen is told through the lens of Akiko, preferably Jane, and her interactions with her mother, Sumi, and boyfriend/fiance, Shiro. Throughout the novel there is a detachment between Jane and not only these individuals, but the world around her. Guthrie reflects on the themes such as imperia......more

Goodreads review by Kupers on April 12, 2020

Kimiko Guthrie’s beautifully written and thoroughly intriguing novel contains profound truths, stated quietly, almost as background to her gripping modern tale. She touches poignantly on the effects of locking up Japanese-Americans during WW II, how people’s lives were damaged then and would be for......more


Quotes

“In her debut novel, Kimiko Guthrie creates an alternately whimsical and nightmarish thriller in which the mystery seems to remain just out of reach…With Block Seventeen, Guthrie has recreated the fear of the other and created a hauntingly visceral experience that will linger on the fringes of the amygdala.” Salon

“At this darkly divisive moment in our republic’s history, Block Seventeen stands as a manifestly timely work that addresses historical trauma, the fragile nature of identity, the folds of history and memory’s fissures. It is replete with surprises, sudden turns, and multiple voices while unblinkingly dramatizing the profound and enduring, intergenerational psychic scars left by the World War II Japanese American internment experience. Yet the novel is not without a knowing, redemptive humor as its characters attempt to find and define themselves not only in the unstable space between two cultures, but in the shifting terrain between past, present, and an unforeseeable future. Its quiet urgency speaks to us all.” Michael Palmer, author of The Laughter of the Sphinx

“Compelling…A twenty-first-century ghost story offers chills in this…promising debut.” Kirkus Reviews

“The reader is taken back and forth in time in an absorbing…narrative that is purposeful in its examination of how we seem to be reliving past horrors, speeding back down the same road, this time on the high-octane fuel of technology. This promising and totally immersive debut, rich in Japanese American culture, is as devastating and evocative as Julie Otsuka’s When the Emperor Was Divine, with a Hitchcockian overlay of suspense.” Booklist

“Striking and beautiful, Block Seventeen includes reflections of family, legacy, secrets, and trauma that will shake readers to the core.” Ms. Magazine

“A layered mystery shrouded in grief, paranoia, and intergenerational trauma, set in the Bay Area but located in the half-hidden histories of many of its residents who lived through the Japanese American internment camps of the not-so-distant past.” Thi Bui, author of The Best We Could Do

“Kimiko Guthrie has written a breezy, accessible novel that manages to defy multiple genres. Block Seventeen is part love story, part supernatural ghost tale, part family history, and part political thriller, with nothing less than the Japanese internment in America during World War Two—and today’s treatment of immigrants—coursing through its haunted, beating heart.” Susan Jane Gilman, New York Times bestselling author

“Block Seventeen grabbed me from the first page and held me in delightful suspension till the last. A young Japanese American woman’s current life collides with the unresolved ancestral pain of her foremothers in a swirl of mystery, current-day politics, profound love, and near-madness—all couched in gorgeous prose. Guthrie is an outstanding novelist that I hope we will hear from again soon.” Sarah Shourd, author of A Sliver of Light and The Box

“In Block Seventeen, Kimiko Guthrie blends horrors both supernatural and all too real to create a moving portrait of family, love, and the myriad ways trauma can haunt us across generations. This is a beautiful book, one that will linger in the reader’s heart long after its final pages.” Shaun Hamill, author of A Cosmology of Monsters

“Lightning has struck twice with Block Seventeen. With this profound and devastating look at generational trauma, Kimiko Guthrie has not only penned a stunning debut, but a vital work of speculative fiction.” Cadwell Turnbull, author of The Lesson


Awards

  • PopSugar Pick
  • Bustle Pick
  • Ms. Magazine Pick
  • Chicago Review of Books Pick
  • BookBub Editors' Pick
  • Audible Editors Top Pick