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Published January 24, 2024

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City Under One Roof
City Under One Roof
by Iris Yamashita

Paperback (16 Jan 2024), 304 pages.
Publisher: Berkley Books
ISBN-13: 9780593336694
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A stranded detective tries to solve a murder in a tiny Alaskan town where everyone lives in a single high-rise building, in this gripping debut by an Academy Award–nominated screenwriter.

When a local teenager discovers a severed hand and foot washed up on the shore of the small town of Point Mettier, Alaska, Cara Kennedy is on the case. A detective from Anchorage, she has her own motives for investigating the possible murder in this isolated place, which can be accessed only by a tunnel.

After a blizzard causes the tunnel to close indefinitely, Cara is stuck among the odd and suspicious residents of the town—all 205 of whom live in the same high-rise building and are as icy as the weather. Cara teams up with Point Mettier police officer Joe Barkowski, but before long the investigation is upended by fearsome gang members from a nearby native village.

Haunted by her past, Cara soon discovers that everyone in this town has something to hide. Will she be able to unravel their secrets before she unravels?

Chapter One
Amy

"And when did you find the body" - Officer Neworth paused for a moment before adding - "parts? When did you find the body parts?"

It was a hand and a foot, to be exact. Or at least Amy thought there was a foot. She hadn't bothered to look inside the boot, but since Officer Neworth said "parts" instead of "part," she assumed there must have been a foot - a bloated, sawed-off, purple-blotched piece of flesh that would have made her dry heave at the sight.

"Yesterday, around eleven a.m.," she said. She was pretty sure she had mentioned this detail at least six times that very day. She'd thought getting pulled out of algebra class would be fun, but now she was having second thoughts.

The boot, she remembered, looked fairly new. It was covered with mud and grime, but the treads weren't that worn and the laces hadn't frayed yet. She hadn't told any of this to Officer Neworth, though. Up until then, she'd tried to say as little as possible, sticking to answers like "Yes," "No," and "I don't know."

Amy Lin stared at Officer Neworth and his receded-to-an-island hairline and decided that he was not someone who could be trusted. For one thing, he was wearing a gold watch. Any man who wears a gold watch is a little shady. Second, anyone who asks you the same question over and over expecting a different answer does not trust you, and therefore you should not trust them. And last of all, Neworth was from Anchorage, and Point Mettier people tended to keep their mouths shut around any of the "otters." "Otters" is what the kids called people outside Point Mettier because it kind of sounded like the word "others."

"So, tell me again, who were you with?" he asked.

Amy sighed internally and gave him a glare. Did she look like a caged parrot that would keep repeating the same thing over and over again?

Officer Neworth shifted in his seat and adjusted his leather duty belt, which sagged with the weight of lethal equipment-a baton, cuffs, a magazine pouch, a flashlight, a Taser, pepper spray, and of course, a Glock pistol. But despite all his protective equipment, Neworth looked uncomfortable under the glare of a seventeen-year-old teenager who was barely five foot two. He finally turned his eyes away and looked down at his notepad. "Celine Hoffler and Marco Salonga?"

"Yes," Amy finally answered as if his question was somehow offensive.

"And what were you doing at the cove?"

"Just getting out." Amy wasn't about to tell him the real reason they went to the cove, which was to smoke pot. Marijuana was legal in Alaska, but they were still minors.


It was a Sunday, and there was a break in the rain, so they had all bundled up in their neoprenes, parkas, and ski caps and decided to paddle their kayaks out to Hidden Cove. On sunny days in summer, Sanders Glacier across the inlet would look brilliant against the sky, with blue and white ice caps like a giant slushy spilled onto a mountain valley. Tourists would come in flocks during the high season to Point Mettier. Even though, Amy knew, the real pronunciation of "Mettier" was probably the French way, rhyming with "get away," everyone butchered the name and said it in a way that sounded like "dirtier." The otters always wanted to see the glaciers in the sound and paid top dollar for cruise ships and yachts to take them up close. Amy wasn't sure why. She'd been up to a few of the glaciers, including Sanders, and had come to the conclusion that they were prettier from afar. On that Sunday in October, though, there had been dense clouds hanging low over the cove and Sanders just looked like a looming gray monster behind the mist.

Since tourist season was over and the thrum of motorboats and seagoing vessels was gone, it was pretty quiet on the water. Just the dwop dwop sound of their paddles dipping in and out, and the kittiwakes screeching overhead. Once they got to the beach, they loitered around, passed a joint, not really talking or doing anything specific. Celine hopped on a fallen log and balanced ...

Full Excerpt

Excerpted from City Under One Roof by Iris Yamashita. Copyright © 2023 by Iris Yamashita. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.

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Please be aware that this discussion guide will contain spoilers!

  1. How did having different narrators affect the storytelling? Did you identify with one more than with the others?
  2. The author has said that she was inspired by Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. Did you find any references in the story? Do you think there were any characters or moments that could have been inspired by the book?
  3. Did your feelings about some of the characters change as you read the novel? Do you have a favorite?
  4. Was Chief Sipley a good father?
  5. There is a high occurrence of violence against women in Alaska. Why do you think that is? Do you think there is anything that can be done to change that?
  6. What do you think you'd like most about living in Point Mettier? What would you like least?
  7. Do you think the ending was justified?
  8. What do you think Cara will do after the revelation on the final page?

 

Unless otherwise stated, this discussion guide is reprinted with the permission of Berkley Books. Any page references refer to a USA edition of the book, usually the trade paperback version, and may vary in other editions.

A mystery in a small Alaskan town is driven by a colorful cast of engaging characters.

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When a disembodied arm and leg wash ashore in Point Mettier, Alaska, most residents assume they belong to someone who died by suicide. But Detective Cara Kennedy, who comes to the town from Anchorage to investigate, suspects there's more to this story.

The cast of oddballs and misfits in Iris Yamashita's City Under One Roof rent apartments in a single high-rise complex known as "Dave Co," where everyone knows everyone else's business. These strange folks do not greet Cara warmly as she begins poking around and asking questions about the washed-up body parts. The locals of Point Mettier wish to be left alone, happy to assume the appendages belong to a soul lost to depression at sea. As the mystery unfolds, Yamashita shifts between multiple points of view, covering the perspectives of Cara; Amy, a teenager working with her mother in their local Chinese restaurant; and Lonnie, a troubled woman with a pet moose who has spent time in a mental institution and seems to know a few too many secrets surrounding the mysterious death. Through these unique characters and the novel's suspenseful plot, Yamashita explores multiple themes, including immigration, family bonds and mental illness.

Amy navigates tension with her mother, who is strict and hard-working, always focused on maintaining their restaurant. When Amy, who knows relatively little about her Chinese heritage, wants to do a DNA test for an extra credit project at school, her mother becomes unsettled and frustrated. After uncovering a secret that could threaten their immigration status, Amy finds herself in the position of needing to protect them from being deported as out-of-town detectives are snooping around. It's easy to sympathize with Amy's teenage angst and her struggles to understand her identity, especially with the added complications of feeling out of place as an immigrant, her uneasy relationship with her mother, and the possible legal troubles they both face.

Lonnie, meanwhile, suffers traumatic childhood memories of witnessing her mother's death and the institution she was sent to live in afterward. While she cares deeply for her moose companion, Denny, she isolates herself from the Point Mettier community because she doesn't trust anyone. The voices in her head tell her that everyone talks behind her back. I applaud Yamashita's effort to bring mental illness to light, but representing it clearly and accurately is imperative to breaking stigma, and that is not always done here, as Lonnie's condition seems more associated with a generic idea of mental illness than something realistic. Her symptoms could be connected to schizophrenia, but they are indistinct at times. For example, her fixation on certain words causes her to get lost in word association, but it is unclear whether this is due to her thoughts or auditory hallucinations. However, her experiences invoke compassion, and her story is made evocative and intriguing through her memories and the secrets she keeps related to Chief Sipley, the local chief of police.

As Cara seeks to uncover the truth behind the beached body parts, she is wrestling with grief over the sudden loss of her husband and son on a camping trip, and her quest for answers drives her work. She thinks their deaths might be connected to the case in Point Mettier, but she must overcome her clouded judgment to prevent personal motivations from distracting her. She also must try to not be sidetracked by her growing feelings for local police officer J.B., who is aiding in the investigation.

City Under One Roof is filled from cover to cover with compelling stories from engaging characters. As Yamashita conveys, all the members of this community have complicated backstories, and not everyone likes everyone else. However, they check on each other's well-being, keep each other's secrets, and protect one another from strangers and threats. Yamashita weaves their experiences and perspectives together to drive the mystery, and as it unfolds, the reader cannot help but become attached to this odd community and the sense of familial loyalty between all the inhabitants of Dave Co.

Reviewed by Glory Cumbow

Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
An urban Alaska detective unlocks menacing secrets in a frigid, sinister small town while struggling to recover from a personal tragedy... .Several more or less disreputable residents emerge as suspects as riddles large and small add fuel to the mystery on the way to the final solution. An offbeat, sharply written thriller.

Library Journal (starred review)
The claustrophobic atmosphere in this unique one-building town, isolated by tunnels, weather, and secrets, builds a memorable debut crime novel.

Publishers Weekly (starred review)
Unusual topography plays a major role in screenwriter Yamashita's atmospherically charged debut…that leads to a spellbinding, unforgettable climax and an unpredictable resolution….This distinctively original perspective on a 'community of stragglers, oddballs, and recluses' heralds the arrival of a major new talent.

Author Blurb Ann Cleeves, New York Times bestselling author of The Long Call and Vera Stanhope novels
A well-crafted novel, told through the eyes of three very different women, with a wonderfully claustrophobic and atmospheric background.

Author Blurb C.J. Box, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Shadows Reel
Iris Yamashita blasts into the world of crime fiction by doing something spectacular: introducing us to a totally unique location and sub-culture. A compulsive page-turner that's both atmospheric and claustrophobic at the same time.

Author Blurb Naomi Hirahara, Edgar-winning author of Clark and Division
Electric and fast-paced, this debut thriller is a testament to Yamashita's skills as a storyteller. There's no escape from the isolated Alaska setting for either the murder investigator or the reader. I fell down the rabbit hole and couldn't come out until I read the final page.

Write your own review

Rated 4 of 5 of 5 by JHSiess
A Riveting & Atmospheric Mystery Set in Alaska
Debut author Iris Yamashita says City Under One Roof was inspired by a documentary she viewed more than twenty years ago about the city of Whittier, Alaska where all of the residents lived in a single building. She knew there had to be a story to be told in such an intriguing setting.

Whittier, Alaska is about sixty miles southeast of Anchorage, at the head of Passage Canal. It is situated between the spectacular mountains and an ice-free port, surrounded by three glaciers. It serves as the gateway to the Prince William Sound wilderness. Snowfall in Whittier averages twenty-two feet per year, but every summer tourists visit the city, many arriving aboard cruise ships. The city is also accessible via the Anton Anderson Memorial Tunnel through Maynard Mountain. At two-and-a-half miles long, it is the longest highway tunnel in North America, built to withstand temperatures up to -40 degrees Fahrenheit temperatures and winds of one hundred fifty miles per hour. In 2000, the one-lane tunnel was made passable by cars in addition to trains, each navigating the tunnel in both directions. The tunnel is aired out between trips with jet turbine ventilation. The single lane of vehicle traffic travels directly over the slightly sunken railroad track, and there are safe-houses within the tunnel -- small buildings that can be used in the event of a severe earthquake, vehicle fire, or other emergency.

Whittier was once known as Camp Sullivan. During World War II, the U.S. Army built the port and railroad to transport soldiers there. Following the war, two high-rise buildings were erected and the Army continued operating the port until 1960. In 1964, the 9.2 magnitude "Good Friday Earthquake," still the largest on record in the U.S., caused over ten million dollars in damage, triggered tsunamis, and claimed forty-three lives. It also rendered one of the city's two large buildings uninhabitable. Incorporated in 1969, the city still boasts a three-person year-round police force and volunteer fire and rescue squad. The city's two hundred and seventy-two or so citizens all reside in a fourteen-story condominimum known as Beghic Towers Incorporated which also houses the hospital, school, and city government offices.

Yamashita set City Under One Roof in fictional Point Mettier, Alaska, modeled after Whittier but with some distinct differences, including additional pedestrian tunnels such as the one used by the town's children to get to their schoolroom. In the story, the shell of one building, destroyed by the 1964 earthquake, remains standing and the diverse group of two hundred and five residents all live in the Davidson Condos, known as the Dave-Co where the post office, a church, an infirmary, and a general store that sells "touristy tchotchkes" are situated. There is also an inn within the structure. Winter lasts for about eight months with temperatures as low as minus thirty-five degrees, and Alaska is thrust into darkness for nearly the entire day for several months of the year. Life in a place like Point Mettier does not appeal to everyone, and the permanent, long-time residents are there for very speciic reasons. Some love the scenic setting, the isolation, or living within such a closeknit community. But most are running away from something or someone, including her protagonist.

In fact, when Yamashita visited Whittier while researching the book, she discovered that when the tunnel only accommodated train travel, one of the female residents was protected by the train conductor who prevented her abusive ex-husband from boarding and traveling to Whittier. A disproportionately high number of women in Alaska have endured domestic violence, in part because of the scant police enforcement of laws and restraining orders designed to protect them in remote regions. She explores the theme of fictional Point Mettier functioning as a safe haven for victims by incorporating that history into the story. Even now that vehicle traffic flows into Point Mettier, the toll booth operator tells Cara that he maintains a list of "no-gooders" to watch out for, but acknowledges that other than checking identification and attempting to dissuade them with stories about the tunnel shutting down there is little he can do to prevent them from entering the city.

Yamashita relates the story from three perspectives. People who travel through the tunnel have the sensation of falling down a rabbit hole and ending up in a strange and crazy wonderland full of quirky characters. Cara Kennedy is an "otter," which is what the townspeople call outsiders. She is a detective with the Anchorage police who arrives in Point Mettier because she is investigating what might be a murder case. Yamashita likens her to Alice in Wonderland, chasing clues as to why body parts have been washing up on the area's shores. As the book opens, in fact, Amy Lin, a local teenager, has stumbled upon a hand and foot. More than a year ago, Cara and her husband, Aaron, decided to take a much-needed vacation with their young son, Dylan. They rented a cabin in Talkeetna near Denali National Park and on the third day, Aaron took Dylan, along with his camera gear, on a morning hike to see snowshoe hares. They never returned. Cara wants to investigate whether their disappearance could be linked in any way to the body parts. When an avalanche closes the tunnel, she is forced to remain in Point Mettier. She teams up with Chief Sipley and the town's only police officer, Joe Barkowski, but does not reveal significant details about what prompted her to travel to Point Mettier. Cara is a highly skilled police professional who has sustained a horrible tragedy. She is determined to get answers, and willing to take whatever risks are required in order to do so. She is also likable and empathetic, particularly as Yamashita gradually reveals more details about the events that compelled her to visit Point Mettier.

Seventeen-year-old Amy Lin has lived in Point Mettier for fourteen years with her mother, who operates a business serving "barely passable" Chinese food that Amy Lin is tasked with delivering. She has recently learned that the details about her family's history and origins that she always accepted as true were actually manufactured by her mother. That knowledge has stirred up perplexing feelings and emotions for her, even though the revelations have given her a new understanding of her mother and her motivations. Day-to-day life in Point Mettier is challenging for Amy Lin due to a lack of activities, even though there are occasional school field trips. She is certain that were it not for Internet access connecting the little town to the rest of the world, she would not survive. There is nothing perplexing, however, about her feelings for her boyfriend, Even Spence Blackmon, who moved to Point Mettier about seven years ago with his younger brother, Troy, and their mother, Debra, who is one of the schoolteachers. Amy and Spence sneak off, along with the other local kids, to the remains of the next-door Walcott Building which used to house a bowling alley, auditorium, movie theater, and indoor pool. When Even and his family go missing, Amy is determined to find them. She is intuitive, observant, and resilient -- the white rabbit to Cara's Alice, according to Yamashita.

Lonnie Mercer is Yamashita's Mad Hatter. She wears a different colored beret every day, speaks in what Yamashita describes as "word salad" (strings of free-flowing, internal word associations) and has an undisclosed mental disability. She lives in fear of being sent back to the Institute where she was forced to live for a time after her mother was killed by an abusive boyfriend. She orders the same thing from Amy Lin's mother every day -- fried rice -- and is devoted to her pet moose, Denny. Chief Sipley looks after Lonnie and instructs her not to speak to Cara, ask her any questions or answer any questions Cara might pose, reminding her, "You don't want to end up back at the Institute, do you?"

Yamashita surrounds her three main characters with an eclectic group of supporting players, including the innkeeper, the manager of the general store, a gang of criminals whose headquarters are located in a nearby village, and a lonely lounge singer who was once a successful recording artist in Japan. Point Mettier is, of course, a central character in the tale, as well -- brooding, claustrophobic, and holding the secrets of its inhabitants. Yamashita's prowess as a screenwriter translates well to a lushly descriptive narrative that brings to life not just her compelling characters, but also the fascinating little town of Point Mettier and the surrounding area. She convincingly details how a place as naturally beautiful as the region can also be eerily menacing and frightening. She effectively melds her characters' emotional struggles with the procedural aspects of Cara's investigation, keeping the action moving forward at a fast pace and accelerating the tension as Cara and Officer Barkowski grow closer to each other and to identifying the individual whose partial remains were discovered by Amy Lin.

In City Under One Roof, some of the mysteries explored are wrapped up in a cohesive, satisfying manner. However, as the story proceeds, Yamashita introduces intriguing additional details pertaining to others and refrains from providing a tidy ending to those plots. Indeed, City Under One Roof is just the first entertaining installment in what promises to be a riveting and atmospheric series featuring Yamashita's colorful and eccentric cast of characters.

Thanks to NetGalley for an Advance Reader's Copy of the book.

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North Korean Immigrants in the United States

In City Under One Roof, some characters living in the small town of Point Mettier, Alaska are hiding their status as undocumented North Korean immigrants. If their secret is discovered, they will face deportation. Their fear of being found out, and their general situation, is based in real-life troubles of North Korean immigrants in the United States.

The US has a long history of political interest in and occupation of the Korean peninsula. After the surrender of Japan in World War II, the US and the Soviet Union occupied Korea (the southern and northern parts respectively), which had previously been colonized by Japan. In the ensuing Cold War era, the US attempted to bring capitalistic influence to the southern part of Korea, in opposition to the communist influence from the Soviets and China in the northern part. These two battling influences gave rise to the Korean War (1950-1953). Since then, an American military presence has been maintained in South Korea. In this capacity, the US has become an option for South Koreans wishing to emigrate and, to a lesser extent, for refugees attempting to escape the repressive and authoritarian North Korean government that resulted from the division of the peninsula.

However, American society has not generally been welcoming or hospitable to defectors seeking refuge from North Korea. The most popular option for North Korean refugees is to settle in South Korea, where there are government outreach programs to help them with education, housing and adjusting to a different society. The process of becoming a citizen takes only three months, and is much simpler than in the United States, where those who aren't turned away face lengthy requirements for naturalization. But some North Koreans still seek to immigrate to the US, often illegally (only a little more than 200 North Koreans have been able to legally settle in the US since a formal process for this was opened to them in 2006). This may be due to the particular discrimination they experience in South Korean society, the impression that they will have a better life in America, or other reasons.

In recent years, the number of refugees from North Korea coming to the United States has sharply declined. Part of this is because the number of North Korean escapees has gone down due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Many North Koreans escape over the North Korean-Chinese border, but border surveillance and closures have been stricter in accordance with COVID-19 restrictions. Also, the Trump administration reduced the yearly cap on refugee admissions from North Korea and banned travel to the US for North Korean citizens.

In addition to immigration challenges, capitalist culture in the US can be extremely difficult for North Koreans to acclimate to. Koreans coming from a communist society have not had experience with rent, bills and the constant exchange of money the economic structure of the US demands.

Chang Ho Kim, a defector who entered the US illegally, told the Guardian that he thinks the American government should do more for North Korean refugees. His family was nearly deported, but they were able to stay on a visa for crime victims. North Koreans in the US mostly depend on charities, rather than the government, for general aid and for help transitioning to American society. As it stands, the US is not an ideal resettlement place for North Korean refugees.

Filed under Places, Cultures & Identities

By Glory Cumbow

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