Upstate: A Novel
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About this ebook
"Baby, the first thing I need to know from you is do you believe I killed my father?"
So begins Upstate, a powerful story told through letters between seventeen-year-old Antonio and his sixteen-year-old girlfriend, Natasha, set in the 1990's in New York. Antonio and Natasha's world is turned upside down, and their young love is put to the test, when Antonio finds himself in jail, accused of a shocking crime. Antonio fights to stay alive on the inside, while on the outside, Natasha faces choices that will change her life. Over the course of a decade, they share a desperate correspondence. Often, they have only each other to turn to as life takes them down separate paths and leaves them wondering if they will ever find their way back together.
Startling, real, and filled with raw emotion, Upstate is an unforgettable coming-of-age story with a message of undeniable hope. Brilliant and profoundly felt, it is destined to speak to a new generation of readers.
Kalisha Buckhanon
Kalisha Buckhanon’s first novel, Upstate, won an American Library Association Alex Award and was nominated for the Hurston/Wright Foundation Legacy Award in Debut Fiction. Terry McMillan selected her to receive the first Terry McMillan Young Author Award in 2006. A recipient of a 2001 Illinois Arts Council Artist Fellowship and an Andrew Mellon Fellow, Buckhanon frequently teaches writing and speaks throughout the country. She has a M.F.A. in creative writing from New School University in New York City, and both a B.A. and a M.A. in English language and literature from the University of Chicago. She was born in 1977 in Kankakee, Illinois.
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Reviews for Upstate
94 ratings12 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A series of love letters between a young high school couple that unfolds abusive childhoods, urban life, unconditional love and growing up and away. A modern love story that will capture the attention of young adults with its gritty dialogs and circumstances of the main characters that most readers will be able to show empathy for. Definitely, a high school read and could be used for discussion in health, ethics and literature classes.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This was interesting enough. Not something that was really great I would say, but interesting. I like books about prison, or people in prison. I also like books written in letter style. I think this book would have done more if it were not fiction. Though, I think it was powerful. I was glad in the end it wasn't exactly a happy ending. It made it more believe able. It think it showed the true power of how prison can effect relationships and families. (Not that that needed proving I guess....) I thought the characters felt very real and that the story was well written. It kept my attention, but I can't say it's at the top of any of my lists.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The story starts with a bang and keeps going all the way through at an emotionally intimate and thrilling pace. We follow the plight of a young black man from being accused, through trial, and his imprisonment. The author truly brings the situation to life for you, you'll feel like you were there and you know him, and all the ways he is viewed: by his girlfriend -> fiance, mother, neighborhood, friends, brothers and society.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I bought an audio recording of the book at a used book sale and decided to play it in my car as I travel the southern roads of Alabama. The story surprised me with interesting characters told between a young couple whom are separated by incarceration and their lives are illustrated through letters to one another. To listen to Upstate by Kalisha Buckhanon on audio is the best way you can actually hear the maturity in the main characters, Natasha's voice as the story progresses just like she did in the story.The cover of this book caught my eye with a white butterfly on a red background. I have owned this book for several years and the only hesitation in reading it was on the assumption that it's of an urban nature based on its title "Upstate" referring to the New York and more precisely the prison. Urban is not my preferred genre, therefore I put off reading it until seven years later. This book invoked so many emotions within me, sorrowful, proudness, shame and bittersweet to name a few. This was a very reflective story on love, pain and coming of age.I'm anxiously awaiting to read her next novel, "Solemn"
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This is a suprisingly good novel that starts very simply (with letters between Natashia, who vows to stand by her jailed boyfriend, accused of killing his father; and Antonio, a confused boy/man made to face the cruelty and abuse done to his family) but unwinds into layers of profound reflections regarding being born into, and surviving, a tough life. At its core, this is a love story, but really, says so much more. Through the letters, we grow up with these characters, in vastly different ways. There are so many novels out there where the characters are flat, but I felt like I was living with these two, they were brilliantly portrayed, down to the nuances of each of their daily lives. The reader is a voyeur on their lives and while I was a little tentative about the "letter" novel, it ended up being the ideal way to transport me into these lives. Ms. Buckanon has amazing potential and I will look for her other works. Highly recommended, but it is very graphic, both in violence, severe language and sexual content. But it's not a book I'll soon forget.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Someone told me before reading it that it was typical...and they were right. Everything I expected to happen, happened. I just wanted to be surprised just once.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Heartbreaking story of young love torn apart by a murder. It's very well-written and pulls the reader in to the character's world.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I really enjoyed this book. As a LMS in a high school I bought this book for my school library. Kids seemed to be really drawn to it. After I got a raving review by a junior that took it home. It is definately a page-turner. I really enjoyed it. Very realistic writing,'tones', and character. Young love and issues with growing up.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I came to this novel with no expectations and I was immediately drawn into the epistolary narrative. I liked following Natasha more than I liked Antonio. Natasha is so raw and vulnerable in the beginning and piece by piece she becomes! The power of story! Of writing. I did like Antonio’s review of Catcher in the Rye from a Black young adult perspective. Beautiful book. So glad I stumbled on it.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Two Harlem teens (Antonio & Natasha) confess their love for one another, but have to correspond through letters due to Antonio's arrest.
I enjoyed meeting these two teens and thought their story was told very realistically. The dialog between them was filled with a lot of raw emotion, but bad language as well. Despite the language, I was interested in both characters - they were so well-developed and distinct. Being that they were from Harlem, there were many urban aspects to the novel. I found it to be very compelling. (3.75/5)
Originally posted on: "Thoughts of Joy..." - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Upstate by Kalisha Buckhanon is written as a series of letters from two young people. The boy, Antonio is at first in jail and then in prison for the murder of his father. His girlfriend, Natasha lives and goes to school in Harlem, New York. This was an incredible reading experience as these two teenagers at first express all the passion they feel between them, talk about their lives growing up in Harlem, and of course, worry and plan for a future when Antonio is out of jail. Antonio is, at heart, a good kid. His father was a brutal man and regularly beat his wife and kids. When Antonio stepped between his father and his mother things went too far.
I felt very much like a fly on the wall as Antonio struggles to keep his sanity while being locked up. He eventually gets his high school equivalency and works as a cleaner in the prison. Due to both his prison record and his lack of education, it is obvious that Antonio will be struggling for the rest of his life. Natasha is a good student and her world starts to widen when she first gets awarded a school trip to Paris, France and then realizes that she is smart enough to apply to the better universities, and doesn’t have to settle for a city college. Their letters show this growing apart and when Natasha leaves for college, they decide to remain “just friends”. The years pass and the letter get less frequent but one or the other stays in touch. Although their lives have gone in such different directions, they are bound together by their fondness for each other and the memories that they share.
I thought the author did an amazing job with this story. This epistolary novel allowed the characters to feel genuine as they shared their inner thoughts, feelings and desires. Their love story is believable, as to was their eventual growing apart. A powerful coming-of-age story that gives the reader an insider’s look at the lives of young black people during the 1990’s. Sadly, I don’t think much has changed. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I bought an audio recording of the book at a used book sale and decided to play it in my car as I travel the southern roads of Alabama. The story surprised me with interesting characters told between a young couple whom are separated by incarceration and their lives are illustrated through letters to one another. To listen to Upstate by Kalisha Buckhanon on audio is the best way you can actually hear the maturity in the main characters, Natasha's voice as the story progresses just like she did in the story.
The cover of this book caught my eye with a white butterfly on a red background. I have owned this book for several years and the only hesitation in reading it was on the assumption that it's of an urban nature based on its title "Upstate" referring to the New York and more precisely the prison. Urban is not my preferred genre, therefore I put off reading it until seven years later.
This book invoked so many emotions within me, sorrowful, proudness, shame and bittersweet to name a few. This was a very reflective story on love, pain and coming of age.
I'm anxiously awaiting to read her next novel, "Solemn"
Book preview
Upstate - Kalisha Buckhanon
PART ONE
January 25, 1990
Dear Natasha,
Baby, the first thing I need to know from you is do you believe I killed my father? I need to know if you believe what everybody saying about me because I need to know if you got my back. Right now I don’t know who in my corner and who ain’t. I looked in the mirror this morning and I didn’t see nothing. That’s how I feel, like I’m nothing. Like nobody see me or hear me or care about me or care what I got to say. Ma told me that some of my cuzos say they gonna kill me when I get out, say they gonna put a shank in my throat just like everybody say I did my daddy. They saying I better hope I got to do time cause when I get out it’s a wrap. But see, they don’t know me like you do. They don’t know what I been through like you do. You was the only person who ever listened to me, you mostly, maybe Trevon and Black. Sometimes Ma. But mostly you. Remember all the shit we used to talk about late at night on the phone? About dropping out of school and going to Mexico or down South or somewhere like that? About us opening up some businesses and shit? About my music and me balling and you doing hair and shit? I know you remember. I do. I remember every word you ever said to me.
You thinking about me? I hope so because I’m thinking about you. I know you hadn’t heard from me, but I’m in a large holding cell right now with a bunch of other cats, they trying to decide if I should be transported because I’m a juvenile. But they gonna move me soon, that’s for sure. I’ll let you know when they move me and where I’m at. I’m not even supposed to be writing this and mailing it to you cause I ain’t got those privileges where I’m at. But two cats been looking out for me these past few days said, Tell us what you need son and we can hook you up; they’ve been here many times before. I told them, I need to write my girl. They know a guard who keep the communication flowing between the outside and in, so that’s why you getting this letter. Baby girl I miss your fine ass so much I can’t even think about how I’m gonna get out of this shit. I can’t believe I’m here. Don’t even know how I got here. I don’t care. I’m thinking about the last time we saw each other. It seem like just yesterday me and you was bugging out in St. Nick Park, jumping over cars and shit. Member that white man watering his plants on his fire escape, and how he hollered bout calling the pigs and Black threw a bottle up at his ass and told him to get out of our hood? That shit was wild, that shit was funny. It was fun, the best time in my life. Then remember me and you went up them high steps that go to city college, and you let me suck your titties and rub you until you got all creamy and wet? I know you wanted to do something, if Black and Laneice wouldn’t have been all up in the business, laughing and shit. Mad because they wasn’t getting none. Remember what you said when we was walking back down and you was buttoning up your shirt and patting your baby hair down? Remember when you said you loved me?
Write back soon,
Antonio
January 27, 1990
Dear Antonio,
What happened? Did you kill him? Did you really do it? It’s been on the news, in the papers, everything. Everybody at school and on the block keep asking me, keep wanting to know if I was there and if I seen it and if I helped you keep it a secret. I keep telling them naw, I didn’t have nothing to do with that shit, but they don’t believe me. Popos been over here three times asking me questions. They keep asking me was you on drugs and did you hit me and stuff like that. I told them no, but they kept on asking and they wouldn’t leave and Mommy was getting upset. So, I didn’t want to, but I told them you get high. I lied and said you didn’t do it that much, just once in a while. They asked me if you did crack and I said Hell no! Antonio wasn’t no hype, he just smoked weed that’s all.
I think they believe me because they ain’t been back since. You know I would never give you up, I would never tell about any of the shit you did. That’s how much I love you. I got your back baby, cause I know you would do the same for me. I miss you so much I can’t even breathe. I can’t even get on the train or the bus no more cause I’m so used to taking it with you. I been walking everywhere now, but I don’t mind. It give me some time to think, to clear my head, to figure out what the hell is happening with you, with me, with everything.
People at school won’t stop staring at me and asking me questions. And Mr. Lombard, with his two-faced racist ass, had kept me in class after algebra wanting to know if I was okay and if I needed to talk to somebody. I didn’t tell him shit either. I told him I was fine and I just wanted to go home so I could get ready to fix dinner cause Mommy was working late. I still ain’t forgot about how he lied on me and said I was talking in class when I wasn’t and I got in detention hall for a week. Don’t try to be my friend now. But anyway, that’s off the subject of what happened. I want you to tell me what happened. I promise to God swear on my daddy’s grave that I won’t tell nobody, not anybody, not even one living soul, not even Mommy. Just tell me. It won’t make no difference. What I said that night was true.
Love Always,
Natasha
February 1, 1990
Baby Girl,
This the deal yo, I can’t talk about nuthin. I don’t want to tell you what happened unless we face to face in private. I can’t talk about nuthin. Everybody up in my business, out to get me. I can feel it. I can tell. I can see everybody looking at me, I can hear them talking about me. Them motherfuckers opened your letter. They opened my shit and read it. When I got the envelope, it was ripped in half and the letter looked like it had been wet up. So, I know they reading this. I know they read everything I write. I wanted to tell the cracker who brought it to me that he ain’t had no right to read my baby’s shit, that it was between a man and his woman and that’s always sacred, but I didn’t say nothing. I just shook my head, cause I’m not trying to make no trouble. I’m trying to get out of here. They not gonna get me on some dumb shit. They not gonna win. So, to whoever reading this, fuck you and your mama too. Fuck you over and over and over again. I hope you die.
I been sent up to another facility right now.—It’s on some island right off the Bronx. Natasha, they put chains around my ankles and connected me to a lot of other cats being transported from Manhattan in this big van. The ride was bumpy, but quiet. Nobody said a word, nobody looked at each other. When we got to the new joint, they unchained us in this big room that looked like a warehouse and told us to take off all our clothes. We had to stand there naked. I was shaking it was so cold, and one by one they searched our mouths and other places I don’t want to tell you about. I got my own room with a tiny cot, a toilet with a sink on top, and this really long, narrow window that’s about three feet tall. The walls is white concrete like in the pj’s. I’m writing really fast cause I wanna finish this letter before dark. There’s no light, when the sun goes down, that’s it. But I don’t care. At least I’m not in a holding cell no more with twenty other funky cats and a stopped-up toilet like I was in Manhattan. People keep coming to talk to me—these court-appointed lawyers from someplace called the People’s Advocacy or something like that. So far, it’s been three different lawyers—this blond lady, some nerdy black dude, and now this fat white guy. Every time they switch they tell me the other one got busy cause they’re overloaded with cases. I just say, Oh well as long as you know I’m not a murderer and what I did was in self-defense. I don’t think any of them believed me though, cause they all said, That’s what they all say and let me decide your defense. I feel a million miles from Harlem. But I think I can see the Empire State Building from here. I wish I could tell you everything that’s happened to me, but it seem like it happened so fast I can’t remember nothing.
A neighbor in my building called the popo’s on the night everything went down. She had heard all the noise coming from my apartment, but when they came my mother answered and told them everything was alright. They came back a few days later after my daddy didn’t show up for work for two days and we didn’t answer the phone. My mother begged me not to open the door, begged me not to fess to anything, but I pushed her off me and told her that I was a man and I would live up to what I had done. I opened the door myself and took them to where my daddy was. They threw me down on the ground in front of Ma, Trevon, and Tyler. I put my hands behind my head—I didn’t resist. But they didn’t care. They put their knees in my back and twisted my arms anyway when they put the handcuffs on. They took me to a police station all the way downtown and fingerprinted me and took a mug shot. They left me in a dark room with a slide-back window overnight. They didn’t give me nothing to eat or drink. They didn’t let me out to go to the bathroom and I had to whizz in the corner cause I was already a little sour under the arms, just from being scared and getting roughed up, and I didn’t want to piss on myself and smell like that too. Next thing I knew, I was in this big room all by myself with three cops asking me why I stabbed my father over a dozen times. By then, I was having second thoughts about confessing so I just lied and said I didn’t do nothing until they got tired of screaming and yelling at me. They just handcuffed my hands and ankles together, and put me in this long hallway where other guys kept getting called in one by one to this room that I really couldn’t see into. I asked the dude sitting next to me what was going on, and he said something about rain. When they finally brought me in there, I realized it was a courtroom and I was standing before a judge. This blond lady I never seen before—that was the first lawyer—said something about entering a plea of guilty by reason of insanity and I yelled, No I’m not crazy! The judge stopped everything and told my lawyer to take me back and calm me down and get our story straight before we show our faces again in his courtroom. They took me back to the first room and I was waiting for the lawyer to show up so I could explain to her that I was just trying to stop my daddy from hitting my mother and it was an accident and I’m not crazy I just stabbed him too hard when I just meant to scare him, but she never showed back up.
But Natasha I do want you to know I’m okay. I want you to know that you all I been thinking about and there ain’t shit that’s gonna tear us apart—not the cops, not these pen walls, not my daddy, nothing. I need you to come see me soon. I need to see your face so bad it hurts. I can’t have no phone calls right now but we need to talk to each other in person so I can tell you what happened.
Write back soon,
Antonio
February 4, 1990
To My Baby:
Okay, so you still didn’t go into details about what really happened, but it don’t matter to me anyway. When I told you I loved you, I really did mean it. I’m glad I said it then because if I would have waited I would have never got to tell you face to face, just in a letter and that’s not the right way to do it. So, I’m not gonna ask you no more what happened. I just know that whatever it was, it wasn’t on you. It wasn’t your fault. So, all that matter to me is that I know it wasn’t your fault and you know I believe you didn’t never want to hurt nobody. I walked past your locker today in the C wing. I know that ain’t my wing and I wasn’t supposed to be over there, but I think in my mind I kind of hoped that you might be standing there waiting for me after lunch the way you used to. Of course you wasn’t, but I was glad I walked by anyway. It kind of smelled like you when I walked by. Not no bad smell cause I can see your face right now all twisted up. Naw it was real good. That black licorice oil you wear and Cherry Now n’ Laters you like and that coconut hair grease I used to put on your scalp before me or Laneice braid your hair. That’s one of the things I love about you, the way you smell. Sweet all the time, like a girl. I bet you wanna know some of the other things I love about you. Well, I like the way you kiss me all deep, the bumpy curls on your head that are soft like cotton balls, the muscles in your arms and your stomach, the way you say my name, the way you put your palms on your cheek sometimes when you talk, that birthmark on your left shoulder, and the way you say other words like son and for real and baby sometimes (when we doing it). What you love about me? You never told me before so might as well tell me now.
Love,
Natasha
February 4, 1990
Dear Natasha,
They gonna let my mother come see me. I don’t know the exact day yet, but my lawyer asked me if there was anything I needed and I told him I wanted to see my family. He said he could try to get me that privilege since I’m only sixteen and all. So, they gonna let her come. You try to come too. I really need to see you. I can’t write much cause the sun is already down and I can hardly see in the moonlight. Just try to come see me.
Love,
A
February 7, 1990
Dear Antonio,
I talked to you mother and I think we all gonna come up there and visit you this weekend, especially since your birthday coming up. I had planned on buying you some new kicks and a cap and maybe even a chain if I had enough. Wish I could cop you a nickel bag. The lawyer said family only, but Black said we could lie about it. He said that when his cousin was moved upstate from Riker’s, the whole school came to see him and his cousin’s moms just kept on telling the guards, My man kept me real busy.
I thought that shit was funny. So, we gonna be there on Sunday. I think that only four or five people can go. I know your mother said she going, and she gonna bring Trevon because he 13 and old enough. But she said she didn’t want to bring Tyler. She said he was too young, that she didn’t want him to see his big bro like that. I think he would love to see his big bro no matter what, but I guess that’s her son so she gotta right to do what she want.
I know your problems are bigger than mine right now, but Antonio I just have to say I’m so sick of hearing my mommy’s and stepdaddy’s mouths I don’t know what to do. All they talk about is this shit that happened and how they told me to stay away from you. I wish I could tell them to go to hell, but I can’t. I wouldn’t have nowhere else to go. I don’t want to do like Drew did when Mommy got with Roy, move to Grandma’s house in the Bronx. It’s too far from school and my friends and you. I’m a Harlem Chick 4 Life!!!!!! That’s why I’ll be glad when all this shit is over and you get out because I think that we should get our own place. I think that we should just go and apply for one of those nice, new buildings that they fixing up finally around here, and we can stay in one of them. I went past one the other day, on 123rd and 8th. It’s going to be called Frederick Douglass Gardens
when it’s finished. Wouldn’t that be nice baby, to live in something called Frederick Douglass? At least I know that Frederick Douglass was black and he tried to free the slaves, I think. He was somebody who was brave and didn’t take no shit and stood up for his rights. Right now, it’s nothing but a big hole in the ground and a bunch of bricks and dust and wood and stuff. But they got a big billboard picture of what the building gonna look like and it’s nice. It looked like a bunch of connected houses, with two and three stories. Not like the brownstones all stuck together or the pj’s, but like real houses with a balcony and white paint and a nice little window on the front door. It was this nice Dominican man outside working on the building. He said he was the supervisor for the construction, so I figured he would know about moving in. So I asked him how you could move in. He told me they’re condos and you had to buy them. I told him I wanted to try and he said that it was really hard because there was something like forty thousand applications for twenty houses. I told him I didn’t think that there was even forty thousand people in Harlem, but I guess there are. Then he said that some of the applications was from people overseas and I wondered why somebody would want to move from overseas to Harlem, but I didn’t ask him. I was running late for my hair appointment on 110 and Columbus. But he told me to call the phone number that was on the sign. That there was a lottery for people from the community, which I guess meant us. He was real nice. I gave the number to Mommy when I got home but she was too tired from work to