On This Page

Description

ForeWord Reviews Book of the Year Award Winner Finalist forForeword's 2011 Book of the Year Award in Literary Fiction "[Nahoonkara]...incorporates elements of historical fiction with experimental fiction, but nothing that pulls the reader out of the fictional dream." --Robin Martin,Gently Read Literature "Departing from traditional narrative form, Grandbois moves masterfully between first, second, and third persons to invite readers into a textual visualization of how individual choices show more affect the well-being of the community." --Review of Contemporary Fiction "Peter Grandbois is a splendid writer I intend to follow very closely." --Robert Olen Butler, Pulitzer Prize Winning author ofA Good Scent From a Strange Mountain "Vividly drawn, exquisitely crafted,Nahoonkara bespeaks not just the promise of its author, but also his undeniable power."--Laird Hunt, author ofRay of the Star "Peter Grandbois has created an original world...and peopled it with a family portrayed vividly and with intense emotion and compassion."--Sheila Kohler, O.Henry award winning author ofCracks and Becoming Jane Eyre In the tradition of nature writers Rick Bass and Annie Dillard, award winning writer Peter Grandbois' new novelNahoonkara opens up an oneiric space of wonder, a place outside preconceived notions of reality and identity, a place where we are free to re-imagine ourselves. show less

Tags

Member Reviews

1 review
If I tried to summarize nahoonkara, I’d probably come up with something like this: a story told in the voices of several members of the Gerrull family, moving back and forth between mid-nineteenth-century Wisconsin and a mining town in late nineteenth-century Colorado. It would be a summary that wouldn’t necessarily inspire me to pick up this novel and read it, which goes to show that summaries don’t tell you anything about a book.

Even more than the (his)story of a family in a particular space and time, this novel depicts the chemistry and alchemy of a community. Surprisingly, the warmth with which it accomplishes this is not incompatible with the dreamlike universe of snow that emerges toward the end of the novel. In the town of show more Seven Falls snow falls for three months in a row and people start building tunnels in order to survive and move from place to place, thus creating an alternative, underground world where all the laws from the world above are abolished. This universe of snow that ends up covering the entire town is identical to the one Killian (the novel’s main voice) has seen, much earlier in the novel, in a trance induced by a mesmerist.

The novel has the flow of a rhapsody in which people and natural elements are equal characters. It requires the attention one needs to read poetry and it has the same entrancing power.

“All through the night, I held her close, hoping the pressure would solidify her, that the friction would smooth the rough edges, reshape the pieces that had not been abraded, but I was new to the ways of love, and I did not know that just because one soul wills something that intention cannot always cross the vast gulf to another.”
show less

Members

Recently Added By

Author Information

8 Works 88 Members
Peter Grandbois is the author of twelve books, the most recent of which is Everything Has Become Birds (Brighthorse 2021). His poems, stories, and essays have appeared in over one hundred journals. His plays have been nominated for several New York Innovative Theatre Awards and have been performed in St. Louis, Columbus, Los Angeles, and New York. show more He is poetry editor at Boulevard magazine and teaches at Denison University in Ohio. You can find him at www.petergrandbois.com. show less

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
813.6Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English2000-
LCC
PS3607 .R3626 .G73Language and LiteratureAmerican literature
BISAC

Statistics

Members
8
Popularity
2,502,154
Reviews
1
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
2
ASINs
1