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THE WOMAN UPSTAIRS

Claire Messud

From the New York Times best-selling author of The Emperor’s Children, a masterly new novel: the riveting confession of a woman awakened, transformed and betrayed by a desire for a world beyond her own.
Nora Eldridge, an elementary school teacher in Cambridge, Massachusetts, long ago compromised her dream to be a successful artist, mother and lover. She has instead become the “woman upstairs,” a reliable friend and neighbor always on the fringe of others’ achievements. Then into her life arrives the glamorous and cosmopolitan Shahids—her new student Reza Shahid, a child who enchants as if from a fairy tale, and his parents: Skandar, a dashing Lebanese professor who has come to Boston for a fellowship at Harvard, and Sirena, an effortlessly alluring Italian artist. When Reza is attacked by schoolyard bullies, Nora is drawn deep into the complex world of the Shahid family; she finds herself falling in love with them, separately and together. Nora’s happiness explodes her boundaries, and she discovers in herself an unprecedented ferocity—one that puts her beliefs and her sense of self at stake. Told with urgency, intimacy and piercing emotion, this brilliant novel of passion and artistic fulfillment explores the intensity, thrill—and the devastating cost—of embracing an authentic life. Claire Messud was born in 1966 and was educated at Yale and Cambridge. She lives near Boston with her husband and their two children.
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Published 2013-03-01 by Knopf

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'The Woman Upstairs': A Saga Of Anger And Thwarted Ambition: Article and Interview Read more...

Vogue Daily Q&A Read more...

The novel has been chosen as an Amazon Best Book of the Month for May 2013.

Dutch: Ambo Anthos Italian: Bollati Boringhieri French: Gallimard Korean: Chaek-Se-Sang Spanish: RBA Libros Swedish: Natur & Kultur Turkish: Marti Yayin Grubu

Messud’s work consistently enthralls—her four novels have been either Pen/Faulkner finalists or multiple best book honorees, and all have been New York Times Notable Books. So you can safely bet on her next one, which features an ordinary school teacher in Cambridge, MA, who is first electrified then cruelly betrayed when she becomes involved with the upscale family of a new student, Reza Shahid. Read more...

Messud persuasively plunges us into the tortured psyche of a conflicted soul whose defiant closing assertion inspires little confidence that Nora can actually change her ways. Brilliant and terrifying.

Claire Messud’s daring, Jamesian new novel takes so many chances and provokes so many questions. . . . Messud is a truth teller about the ruthlessness of art [and] makes a key point about creative work: It means smashing boundaries, using imagination to remake the world. . . . Messud is such a gifted painter of our choices and their consequences. She’s never gone this deep before in showing us how our reality and our pipe dreams intersect. Her portrait of Nora Eldridge, a decent woman who has perhaps crossed the wrong bridges in her life, would move stone. What’s going to become of Nora? What will the Shahids do to her? The Woman Upstairs is Claire Messud’s greatest novel.

In Claire Messud’s smoldering new novel, a 37-year-old elementary-school teacher becomes infatuated with a student’s family and experiences a heady awakening. That’s only half the story, though. “The Woman Upstairs” also offers a furious account of betrayal, the true source of which is withheld until the final pages...there are tart meditations on the creative impulse and the artistic ego, on the interplay between reality and fantasy and the often-pitiful limits of human communication. Read more...

#2 Boston Globe 5/26 #3 SF Chronicle 5/26 #3 LA Times 5/26 #4 New Atlantic Indie Bestseller List 5/26 #5 SoCal Indie Bestseller List 5/26 #5 Boswell Book Co. 5/25 #5 Harvard Bookstore 5/27 #5 New England Indie Bestseller List 5/26 #7 Indiebound 5/30 #8 Pacific Northwest Indie Bestseller List 5/26 #14 Heartland Indie Bestseller List 5/26 #14 Southern Indie Bestseller List 5/26 #14 Northern California Indie Bestseller List 5/26 #18 Publishers Weekly 5/27 #22 New York Times Bestseller List 6/9

Messud is an immensely talented writer, and in Nora she gives us a compelling, complex, and unforgettable narrator. The Woman Upstairs is a brilliantly paced story of fearsome love and obsessive longing, and the boundaries and sacrifices of what is to be a woman and to be an artist in the world. Read more...

THE WOMAN UPSTAIRS is on The New York Times list of 100 Notable Books of 2013

An Unseemly Emotion: PW Talks with Claire Messud. With The Woman Upstairs, Claire Messud boldly goes into territory more commonly embraced by her male counterparts... Read more...

Messud’s scorching social anatomy, red-hot psychology, galvanizing story, and incandescent language make for an all-circuits-firing novel about enthrallment, ambition, envy, and betrayal. A tour de force portraying a no longer invisible or silent ‘woman upstairs.’

In Claire Messud’s smoldering new novel, a 37-year-old elementary-school teacher becomes infatuated with a student’s family and experiences a heady awakening. That’s only half the story, though. “The Woman Upstairs” also offers a furious account of betrayal, the true source of which is withheld until the final pages. Read more...

In Claire Messud’s corrosively funny latest, The Woman Upstairs (Knopf), Nora—a not-quite-40 schoolteacher as disappointed in her Katy Perry-obsessed students as she is in her own failed potential—finds her dormant creative passions awakened by a student’s worldly mother, an artist who shows in Paris. An ardent friendship unfolds, ending in a betrayal that unleashes in Nora an eloquent, primal rage. Fifty years ago, Simone de Beauvoir faulted creative women for their unwillingness to ‘dare to irritate, explore, explode.’ Two generations later, anger this combustible still feels refreshing.

The Woman Upstairs is an extraordinary novel, a psychological suspense story of the highest sort that will leave you thinking about its implications for days afterward.