
The Upstate Dispatch
From New York Times bestselling author Kim van Alkemade comes a story of love, loss, and healing that speaks to our present moment while richly evoking the past. A grieving writer who sets out to revive an abandoned bookshop in upstate New York discovers forgotten letters that reveal the shopâs secret sapphic history.
Thirty-four-year-old writer Audrey Beacon is grieving alone during lockdown when a post about a bookshop for sale in upstate New York pops into her social media feed like a lifeline. Enthralled by the historic house and the massive barn bursting with books, Audrey impulsively makes an offer. Soon, sheâs cashing out her savings, loading her possessions into her dead husbandâs van, and fleeing Manhattan for the village of Schuywich, determined to outrun the ghosts of her past.
In 1956, itâs love at first sight when Schuywich librarian Hazel McIntyre meets dashing magazine writer Evelyn Cabot at a summer camp in Maine that discreetly promises a âdifferent vacation for professional women.â By summerâs end, Evelyn has left Greenwich Village to move into an old farmhouse sheâs bought in Hazelâs hometown. In her new column, âThe Upstate Dispatch,â Evelyn writes about her adventures renovating a house, tending to sheep, and opening a bookshop in her barn with help from the woman readers know only as her âroommate.â Privately, Hazel chronicles their six-decade love story in a series of letters that abruptly end when theyâre forced to abandon the bookshop in 2015.
Reopening the bookshop in the summer of 2020 attracts a quirky community of villagers who continuously interrupt Audreyâs solitude: An unemployed Broadway set designer. An ambitious teenage entrepreneur. A story-telling Adirondack grandmother. Then thereâs Sam Rensselaer, the distractingly handsome representative of the agriculture extension. Past and present begin to converge when Audrey finds âThe Upstate Dispatchâ in a stack of old magazines, but itâs the discovery of Hazelâs letters that brings hidden love and long-buried family secrets to light. Will Audrey find the courage to heal the wounds of the pastâincluding her own?
From New York Times bestselling author Kim van Alkemade comes a story of love, loss, and healing that speaks to our present moment while richly evoking the past. A grieving writer who sets out to revive an abandoned bookshop in upstate New York discovers forgotten letters that reveal the shopâs secret sapphic history.
Thirty-four-year-old writer Audrey Beacon is grieving alone during lockdown when a post about a bookshop for sale in upstate New York pops into her social media feed like a lifeline. Enthralled by the historic house and the massive barn bursting with books, Audrey impulsively makes an offer. Soon, sheâs cashing out her savings, loading her possessions into her dead husbandâs van, and fleeing Manhattan for the village of Schuywich, determined to outrun the ghosts of her past.
In 1956, itâs love at first sight when Schuywich librarian Hazel McIntyre meets dashing magazine writer Evelyn Cabot at a summer camp in Maine that discreetly promises a âdifferent vacation for professional women.â By summerâs end, Evelyn has left Greenwich Village to move into an old farmhouse sheâs bought in Hazelâs hometown. In her new column, âThe Upstate Dispatch,â Evelyn writes about her adventures renovating a house, tending to sheep, and opening a bookshop in her barn with help from the woman readers know only as her âroommate.â Privately, Hazel chronicles their six-decade love story in a series of letters that abruptly end when theyâre forced to abandon the bookshop in 2015.
Reopening the bookshop in the summer of 2020 attracts a quirky community of villagers who continuously interrupt Audreyâs solitude: An unemployed Broadway set designer. An ambitious teenage entrepreneur. A story-telling Adirondack grandmother. Then thereâs Sam Rensselaer, the distractingly handsome representative of the agriculture extension. Past and present begin to converge when Audrey finds âThe Upstate Dispatchâ in a stack of old magazines, but itâs the discovery of Hazelâs letters that brings hidden love and long-buried family secrets to light. Will Audrey find the courage to heal the wounds of the pastâincluding her own?
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From New York Times bestselling author Kim van Alkemade comes a story of love, loss, and healing that speaks to our present moment while richly evoking the past. A grieving writer who sets out to revive an abandoned bookshop in upstate New York discovers forgotten letters that reveal the shopâs secret sapphic history.
Thirty-four-year-old writer Audrey Beacon is grieving alone during lockdown when a post about a bookshop for sale in upstate New York pops into her social media feed like a lifeline. Enthralled by the historic house and the massive barn bursting with books, Audrey impulsively makes an offer. Soon, sheâs cashing out her savings, loading her possessions into her dead husbandâs van, and fleeing Manhattan for the village of Schuywich, determined to outrun the ghosts of her past.
In 1956, itâs love at first sight when Schuywich librarian Hazel McIntyre meets dashing magazine writer Evelyn Cabot at a summer camp in Maine that discreetly promises a âdifferent vacation for professional women.â By summerâs end, Evelyn has left Greenwich Village to move into an old farmhouse sheâs bought in Hazelâs hometown. In her new column, âThe Upstate Dispatch,â Evelyn writes about her adventures renovating a house, tending to sheep, and opening a bookshop in her barn with help from the woman readers know only as her âroommate.â Privately, Hazel chronicles their six-decade love story in a series of letters that abruptly end when theyâre forced to abandon the bookshop in 2015.
Reopening the bookshop in the summer of 2020 attracts a quirky community of villagers who continuously interrupt Audreyâs solitude: An unemployed Broadway set designer. An ambitious teenage entrepreneur. A story-telling Adirondack grandmother. Then thereâs Sam Rensselaer, the distractingly handsome representative of the agriculture extension. Past and present begin to converge when Audrey finds âThe Upstate Dispatchâ in a stack of old magazines, but itâs the discovery of Hazelâs letters that brings hidden love and long-buried family secrets to light. Will Audrey find the courage to heal the wounds of the pastâincluding her own?











