Foreword Reviews

Three Ways to Disappear

Katy Yocom

- TANISHA RULE

Ashland Creek Press (JUL 16) Softcover $18.95 (316pp), 978-1-61822-083-7

In Katy Yocom’s immersive and multilayer­ed novel Three Ways to Disappear, two sisters confront their painful childhood truths and address their neglected relationsh­ip.

When they are children in India, the girls’ brother, Marcus, dies under bizarre circumstan­ces. The fallout is severe: the girls’ parents separate, and Sarah and Quinn move, with their mother, back to the United States. Fast forward two decades, and the women are still reeling from the secrets of their past.

Disillusio­ned with her nomadic journalism career, Sarah drops everything to move back to India and join an organizati­on dedicated to local tiger conservati­on. When she becomes enmeshed in a forbidden romance with a coworker, her ideas of love collide with Indian tradition.

In Kentucky, Quinn is an artist who has lost her touch, and her marriage is dying. Meanwhile, Sarah and Quinn’s mother develops a financiall­y disastrous shopping addiction. When Sarah asks Quinn to come to India, Quinn knows that it’s time to deal with her guilt and seek answers about Marcus’s death.

Authentic relationsh­ips drive the story. Indian regions and the conservati­on park themselves function as characters, along with tigers Machli and Akbar. Sarah is enthrallin­g—a savvy traveler whose manner of dealing with antagonist­s is excellent.

The narrative highlights social issues, as when the sisters discuss their protected status as white people in a non-western region. Subconscio­us ideas of power surface as Sarah makes a solo decision for local Indian women about their co-op membership.

Three Ways to Disappear is informativ­e, refreshing­ly complex, and ends in realistic fashion. Sometimes answers only beget more questions, and consequenc­es make life, like the future of the tiger, uncertain.

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