About
Ursula, Under
Author Interview
Book Review
In Michigan's
Upper Peninsula, a dangerous rescue effort draws the ears and eyes of
the entire country. A two-and-a-half-year-old girl has fallen down a
mine shaft—"the only sound is an astonished tiny intake of breath from
Ursula as she goes down, like a penny into the slot of a bank,
disappeared, gone." It is as if all hope for life on the planet is
bound up in the rescue of this little girl, the first and only child
of a young woman of Finnish extraction and her Chinese-American
husband. One TV viewer following the action notes that the Wong family
lives in a decrepit mobile home and wonders why all this time and
money is being "wasted on that half-breed trailer-trash kid."
In response, the novel takes a breathtaking leap
back in time to visit Ursula's most remarkable ancestors: a
third-century-B.C. Chinese alchemist; an orphaned playmate of a
seventeenth-century Swedish queen; Professor Alabaster Wong, a
Chautauqua troupe lecturer (on exotic Chinese topics) traveling the
Midwest at the end of the nineteenth century; her
great-great-grandfather Jake Maki, who died at twenty-nine in a
Michigan iron mine cave-in; and others whose richness and history are
contained in the induplicable DNA of just one person—little Ursula
Wong.
Ursula's story echoes those of her ancestors,
many of whom so narrowly escaped not being born that her very
existence—like ours—comes to seem a miracle. Ambitious and
accomplished, Ursula, Under is, most of all,
wonderfully entertaining—a daring saga of culture, history, and
heredity.
- The Publisher
