Precious Ugly
by Rae Cline
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Pub Date 18 Aug 2026 | Archive Date 15 Nov 2026
Description
Clementine is a girl in trouble. She’s homeless, living in a conversion van at a campground tucked into a little stretch of riverfront on the Potomac. She’s hungry, craving Pop-Tarts while forced to eat fried snake for supper. And she’s pregnant. Daddy says he’ll fix it. But unlike Mama and the folks who believe he can walk on water, Clem knows better than to trust Daddy.
In Precious Ugly, Rae Cline draws us into the story of a thirteen-year-old girl seeking to escape her abusive, alcoholic, charismatic father and desperate to protect her mother. Set in 1985 in Harpers Ferry and Jolo, West Virginia, it’s a story anchored in the promise of Reagan, the fear of AIDS, the songs of Patti Smith, Cyndi Lauper, and Tina Turner heard through a Walkman, and other signs of its time and place. It’s also a universal and ongoing story about poverty, addiction, religious charlatans, sexual predators, and how children are made to suffer for the sins of their parents. As told through the eyes of its remarkable young heroine, Precious Ugly is ultimately a story about the everyday marvels of tenacity and resourcefulness, the kindness of strangers, and the possibility of breaking the cycle of domestic violence and generational trauma.
Advance Praise
"Rae Cline has written a vivid, harrowing account of a young girl struggling to find meaning in difficult circumstances. Clementine is thirteen, pregnant, and looking for a miracle. Her father claims to know that a miracle is coming. But what they get is something else altogether. Or is it? Cline works with a lyrical, meticulous prose style to depict a story that needs to be told. A bold and courageous work of fiction that book clubs and readers of all kinds will adore.
—Matt Bondurant, author of North Country, Oleander City, The Night Swimmer, and Lawless
"Gorgeous, brutal, and moving, Precious Ugly is a powerful testament to human resilience. I could not stop rooting for Clementine, or marveling at her toughness, her tenacity, and her capacity for finding hope and meaning even amid suffering. This is a character, and a story, that will stick with me for a long time."
—Jordan Ritter Conn, author of American Men and The Road From Raqqa
"This is a novel that treads closely to a daunting reality, that protection and safety are not guaranteed by the systems we rely upon, in this instance the nuclear, patriarchal family. In fact, Precious Ugly expresses the commonness with which these systems make us available for maximum damage, especially for women and girls. Relentless, the writing is a beautiful and precise knife. It carves out a nuanced story that tenderly but honestly shows the reader that overcoming the serial patterns of abandonment that we call relationships is only possible by building our escapes in secret every day, by imagining—despite what reality trains us to expect—an elsewhere of more."
—Jessica Lanay, author of am-phib-ian
"Rae Cline's debut novel, Precious Ugly, does the unexpected. It's a story about humanity: love, hardship, survival. The reader becomes one with Clementine; Cline brings empathy to the page in so many unique and compelling ways. A must-read. Phenomenal. A masterpiece."
—Kim Chinquee, author of Contact with the Wild
"Brilliant, heartbreaking, and utterly original, Rae Cline's Precious Ugly is a fearless evocation of faith, family, and the power of self-determination set against the failed promise of Reagan's America. Cline writes with astonishing clarity about belief—how it binds, how it blinds, and how it can be broken, all seen through the eyes of Clementine, a girl growing up in the shadow of prophecy and spectacle, and whose hard-won vision of the world feels like its own kind of miracle."
—Julie Innis, author of Three Squares a Day with Occasional Torture
"Rae Cline is a gutsy writer to be reckoned with. Her debut novel deep dives into Reagan-era Appalachia, besotted with floods, frauds, faith healers, liars, snakes, zombie flicks, John Brown, Billie Holiday, and one pregnant 13-year-old force of nature named Clementine. If David Lynch directed a collaborative script by Dorothy Allison and Eudora Welty, with a pinch of Harry Crews and a dash of Lidia Yuknavitch, you’d be living here. There are myriad miracles and surprises galore. One chapter even tips a hat to Faulkner’s The Reivers. Stand back and get out of Clem’s way."
—Richard Peabody, Editor/Publisher, Gargoyle Magazine
Available Editions
| EDITION | Paperback |
| ISBN | 9798994693841 |
| PRICE | $21.99 (USD) |
| PAGES | 218 |
Available on NetGalley
Average rating from 4 members
Featured Reviews
I love this read. It was really good. I love the storyline of other characters. I would recommend that it kept me at the edge of my seat. I love a good mystery suspenseful book and this gave just that it kept me interested to the very last page. and that’s what I look for when I’m looking for a good read
Reviewer 2075741
Precious Ugly is a brutal, emotionally immersive coming-of-age novel that examines poverty, abuse, religious manipulation and generational trauma through the eyes of a memorable protagonist. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ /5.
Rae Cline writes with raw, lyrical precision, making Clementine’s voice feel immediate and painfully real from the first few pages. Set in Reagan-era Appalachia, the novel captures a world shaped by instability, addiction, coercive religion, and survival without ever feeling sensationalized. Clementine’s intelligence, dark humor, and determination to protect her mother make her impossible not to root for, even as the adults around her fail her repeatedly. The novel also handles faith and manipulation with remarkable nuance, showing how charisma and desperation can become dangerous weapons in vulnerable communities.
The prose blends Southern Gothic intensity with deeply human moments of resilience and compassion. I’d recommend this to readers who enjoy literary fiction centered around difficult family dynamics, Appalachian fiction, and emotionally intense coming-of-age stories.
Thank you NetGalley, and 7.13 Books for the Advanced Reader’s Copy of Precious Ugly by Rae Cline. This will be published on August 18, 2026. This is Rae Cline’s first novel.
The protagonist is a thirteen-year-old girl named Clementine who’s pregnant. Her false prophet of a father will fix all their problems but she learns at a young age that he can’t be trusted.
This was an unsettling read. It felt personal. The themes include poverty, homelessness, domestic abuse, child abuse not limited to pedophilia or incest, and religious corruption. For a book set in the mid-eighties, it speaks volumes for what is happening today.
The writing was poetic and unlike most of the books I typically read. It was a heart wrenching story and hits hard emotionally. It’s the type of book that will stick with you long after you read it especially if you grew up in an environment like Clementine.
As children, we grow up thinking we can trust and confide in our parents. They have our best interests in mind. Right? Unfortunately, that’s not always true and that’s the social commentary with this book. Some of us grow up with that poverty, the addiction and alcoholism, and the pedophiles.
It amazes me how unapologetically oblivious parents can be for their children in this environment not knowing the impact and effect it will have for their lifetime. And those parents will still make the wrong choice. It’s not what’s best for the child, but rather, what’s best for them.
At 49, it still impacts me today.
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