“Hannah Thurman’s debut novel knocked me for a loop, and trust me, it will do the same to you. A slow burn, Mercy Hill—both the place and the people who live there—will stay with you long after you put the book down.” —Richard Russo, author of Empire Falls and the North Bath trilogy of Fool novels
“An intense and poignant debut about four sisters burdened by their mother with an impossible mission—both politically and emotionally—and the different ways they are shaped by the same pressure. With finesse, Thurman renders a layered, extraordinary portrait of the complexity and competing “truths” of childhood—both as it is experienced, and as it is reassessed in adulthood. Readers will leave Mercy Hill pondering where history ends and our own feelings begin.” —Olivia Wolfgang-Smith, author of Mutual Interest
“Mercy Hill is a tremendous debut, a beautifully written, engrossing story of family, individuality, and social purpose. Embedded in the landscape of America’s crumbling mental health care system, the Cross family is a crucible powered by a shared mission, its four brilliant daughters coming of age amid the moral complexities and dangers of freedom—both for the residents of Mercy Hill and for themselves. Hannah Thurman builds a nesting doll of a novel that operates on both a societal and personal level, illuminating the thorny nature of sacrifice and altruism, what it means to genuinely care for others, and what is finally and truly worth defending.” —Lauren Acampora, author of The Paper Wasp
“You might start this book for its insider’s take on a complicated era of mental health in America, but you’ll stay for the rough-hewn family of strong, unbending women. Thurman has given us a heart-breaking story of duty, love, rivalry and dedication, told through the voice of a singular narrator.” —Kawai Strong Washburn, PEN/Hemingway Award-winning author of Sharks in the Time of Saviors
“How often does a book come along with the power and magic needed to keep you reading in the Age of Distraction? Mercy Hill—the story of Denise Cross and her sisters, coming of age on the grounds of an imperiled asylum—meets and exceeds that challenge; rarely spotted in Fiction Forest, this is a creature known as the literary page-turner. Do yourself a favor and don’t start reading before you’ve cleared your calendar. Hannah Thurman’s debut is a knock-out.” —Shelly Oria, author of New York 1, Tel Aviv 0
“Move over, Tolstoy. If it’s true that each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way, then this has got to be the fiercest, funniest depiction of family unhappiness that I’ve encountered in a long time. A blisteringly beautiful debut that addresses the state of American medicine like a masterwork. Hannah Thurman is the realest of real deals.” —David James Poissant, author of The Heaven of Animals and Lake Life