cover image Brass

Brass

Xhenet Aliu. Random House, $27 (304p) ISBN 978-0-399-59024-5

Aliu juxtaposes a mother and daughter’s late teenage desperation 17 years apart in her striking first novel. In the mid-’90s, Elsie waits tables at a greasy spoon in post-industrial Waterbury, Conn. She pins her hopes for upward mobility on Bashkim, an Albanian immigrant who left his wife in the old country and funnels all his money into mysterious investments. An unplanned pregnancy forces them into uneasy cohabitation, where Elsie copes with her mother’s pessimism, the derision of the Albanian wives of Bashkim’s friends, and her partner’s alarming volatility. Aliu intersperses the story of their daughter, Luljeta, a senior in high school whose own hopes for escape from Waterbury are dashed with a rejection from NYU. As she reels, she also discovers her extended Albanian family still lives in the area and can answer questions about the father her mother claimed had died. With the help of Albanian teenager Ahmet, whose modest dreams of Panera franchises starkly contrast with Luljeta’s glamorous goals of leaving town, she sets off to finally find her father. This is a captivating, moving story of drastic measures, failed schemes, and the loss of innocence. Agent: Julie Barer, The Book Group. (Jan.)