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Praise for The Upstairs House

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"Macabre and funny, spooky and soulful, Julia Fine's The Upstairs House lets the reader inhabit a massively entertaining and slyly enlightening story nestled inside another story like a ghost within its host. Love and resentment, madness and clarity compete and comingle in this unforgettable tale of literature and legacy."
Kathleen Rooney, author of Cher Ami and Major Whittlesey and Lillian Boxfish Takes a Walk

“Bonkers, provocative… [an] assured, beautifully written book… a bracing reminder that postpartum life is a kind of horror story of its own.”
Sarah Lyall, The New York Times Book Review

“Deliciously unnerving… The Upstairs House is a masterpiece of juggling multiple genres and themes…. Fine’s unapologetic presentation of female relationships and postpartum struggles makes The Upstairs House a novel you’ll think about for weeks after turning the last page.”
Sara Cutaia, Chicago Review of Books


“In this gripping and stylistically impressive novel, Fine illustrates how the rational and the mythic, the tangible and intangible, intertwine to fully tell a woman’s story… The Upstairs House is constantly aware of sliding between reality and fiction, between the historical and the strange, and how that in-between movement can be both productive and destructive.”
Abby Manzella, The Boston Globe

"The Upstairs House is a haunting that truly haunts. Julia Fine’s writing is sharp, dark, and delightfully twisty. A totally absorbing, fiercely feminist read that keenly dissects not just a psychological break, but the identities of and impossibilities for the women at its heart. This is a book that lingers."
Erika Swyler, author of The Book of Speculation and Light from Other Stars

“In this inventive, visceral novel, Fine creates a dark fairy tale about a woman whose career plans are sidelined by pregnancy and the birth of her daughter.… Fine depicts the devastation of postpartum depression, all too often shrouded in shame and blame, and offers hope.”
Booklist

"The Upstairs House is an inventive, surreal, feminist examination of the postpartum experience. Is new mom Megan Weiler haunted by the ghosts of Margaret Wise Brown and her lover Michael Strange, or is she experiencing a deep postpartum depression? The Upstairs House reveals the isolating, world-changing, full-bodied experience that is new motherhood while unfurling a fascinating tale about one of our most beloved children’s book authors. I love Julia Fine’s brain and the radical stories she creates. Full of rage and resentment and deep love, The Upstairs House is a must-read."
Crystal Hana Kim, author of If You Leave Me

“Julia Fine’s haunting second novel takes on early motherhood and reads like a modern-day “The Yellow Wallpaper” or The Turn of the Screw….fully immersive…I won’t be able to let this story go any time soon.”
Sarahlyn Bruck, Washington Independent Review of Books


"A little bit Shirley Jackson, Samantha Hunt, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, but also completely itself, The Upstairs House manages to turn the banal terrors of early motherhood, of womanhood, and daughterhood, and the ghosts that inevitably accompany them all, into a riveting page turner about trying to love in spite of the traumas that loving has wrought in the past."
Lynn Steger Strong, author of Want and Hold Still


“Fine examines a new mother’s unraveling in her eerie sophomore outing…Fine keeps the high concept under control as the book hurtles toward a disturbing conclusion. This white-knuckle depiction of the essential scariness of new motherhood will captivate readers.”
Publishers Weekly

The Upstairs House is a terrifying jolt of a book. Here are all the openings-up of motherhood, and all the strains of its competing demands, taken brilliantly to their richest, most frightening extremes. I was riveted by every twist and turn of this story about the hauntedness of having a child.”
Clare Beams, author of The Illness Lesson and We Show What We Have Learned & Other Stories