The Columbus Dispatch

Diverse characters define their family

- By Maureen McCarthy

It’s 1998 in Portland, Oregon, and the music scene is raw, grungy and played out in dank bars. This is Portland before the Pearl District gentrifica­tion, before “Portlandia,” still rocking in “dive bars that were not yet Dive Bars.”

Chelsey Johnson’s debut novel, “Stray City,” steeps the reader in the sounds and senses of the LGBTQ culture flourishin­g on the fringe of Portland society.

Her protagonis­t is Andrea Morales, an escapee from a strict upbringing in Nebraska who finds support and validation in Portland’s “Lesbian Mafia.”

But a bad breakup sends her careening into the arms of Ryan, the drummer for an on-the-brink-of-success band — and a straight guy. Unable to break the news to her friends and unable to break it off with Ryan, Andrea slips back into the “double life” she lived as a closeted teen.

“I remembered how alert a secret makes you. ... When you’re always watching out, you see more.”

Clearly, this situation cannot last. Before long Andrea is pregnant and, against all advice, she decides to have the baby. Abandoned by “doctrinair­e” friends, she considers settling down with Ryan and their child.

“Sheer inertia — mere inertia — would carry me there. Assimilate and convert, like my parents had,” she thinks. And if she did? “I would mourn it for the rest of my life.”

What about Ryan? He loves Andrea in spite of everything. But he’d rather not be a dad.

The push-pull pressure sends him off on yet another road trip, not for music this time, but maybe to find a new place to settle, maybe to see if he can make Andrea miss him. • “Stray City” (Custom House, 416 pages, $25.99) by Chelsey Johnson

In one of the book’s many poignant moments, he writes a letter to their unborn daughter, one he never sends. “I figure by the time you’re born, I’ll know what to do. Later, little stranger ... “

This is a richly satisfying read, with so many lines worthy of underlinin­g.

Johnson, a graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop and winner of Stanford University’s Stegner Fellowship, brings both time-tested storytelli­ng and 21st- century originalit­y to her work. As a companion to the book, she includes an online playlist (tinyurl.com/ straycitym­ixtape) timestampe­d to the era.

The musical underpinni­ngs carry into the story. Johnson constructs the narrative like a song, with two main sections connected by a “bridge” of voicemails, emails and letters never sent. It moves from 1998 to 2009 and from Portland to Bemidji, Minnesota, of all places, where Andrea, Ryan and their 10-year-old, Lucia, have their reckoning.

“They had lived such analog lives then. Letters, photocopie­d zines, videocasse­ttes, mix tapes in a Walkman.” Now they have a daughter seeking her father online.

“Stray City” takes the reader on a journey, too, probing what makes families, whether biological or chosen. And it reminds us what it means to find home.

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