Cold: A Novel
by John Smolens
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Internationally acclaimed, Cold takes us deep into a harsh, frozen world, where love, greed, and the promise of a second chance compel six people toward a chilling and inevitable reckoning. In the frozen reaches of Michigan's Upper Peninsula, fierce winter storms hit without warning. The white opacity of one such blizzard allows Norman Haas to walk away from his prison work detail. Dangerously close to freezing to death, Norman is given shelter by Liesl Tiomenen, a middle-aged woman who show more lives in a house she and her late husband built in the woods. Armed with a rifle, she tries to turn him in, but when they set out on snowshoes, she suffers a fall, allowing him to flee again. Thus begins Norman's journey back to his past, back to the woman he loved who betrayed him, back to the brother who helped put him away, back to a dangerous web of family allegiances, deceptions, and intrigue. After finding Liesl injured and abandoned in the woods, Yellow Dog Township's sole full-time law enforcement officer Del Maki pursues Norman through a storm of mythic proportions. show lessTags
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Member Reviews
I found Cold by John Smolens simply passable as a crime thriller. The author excelled at describing the harsh winter conditions in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula but the story felt dragged out and the characters didn’t feel authentic.
During a blizzard, Norman Haas walks away from his prison work detail completely undetected. He is on a mission to travel back home and back to the past in order to right some wrongs. He encounters a woman who tries to help him but he ends up leaving her alone in the snow, he reunites with his old girlfriend and her daughter and they travel even further north to her father’s wilderness lodge where secrets are buried and confrontations await. Tracking Norman, Constable Del Makki realizes that there is show more more going on here than simply a walkaway prisoner seeking freedom but by the time he puts all the pieces together, it’s too late to prevent tragedy.
Unfortunately I found Cold overly melodramatic. The narrative was uneven in style, irregular in quality and the ending was entirely too predictable. On the bright side, I did enjoy the snow clad setting. show less
During a blizzard, Norman Haas walks away from his prison work detail completely undetected. He is on a mission to travel back home and back to the past in order to right some wrongs. He encounters a woman who tries to help him but he ends up leaving her alone in the snow, he reunites with his old girlfriend and her daughter and they travel even further north to her father’s wilderness lodge where secrets are buried and confrontations await. Tracking Norman, Constable Del Makki realizes that there is show more more going on here than simply a walkaway prisoner seeking freedom but by the time he puts all the pieces together, it’s too late to prevent tragedy.
Unfortunately I found Cold overly melodramatic. The narrative was uneven in style, irregular in quality and the ending was entirely too predictable. On the bright side, I did enjoy the snow clad setting. show less
Liesl lost her husband and daughter in an automobile accident during a blizzard. Another snowstorm years later brings back those memories. This storm will also change her life forever when she allows Norman, an escapee from the Marquette Prison, to warm up in her home and a series of unforeseen events is set into motion. In the process of taking him to the sheriff in town, Liesl falls, and Norman abandons her to the cold. She is found by the sheriff, and the manhunt for Norman continues. As the cold permeates a U.P. winter, so does the tension in this thriller. Norman returns to the scene of the crime as love, greed, and hope for another chance in life lead the characters back to their pasts as well as towards a future reckoning.
Cold is perhaps Smolens' best known and most successful book. Although I have liked almost all of John's books, this one, about a sheriff in Michigan's Upper Peninsula in pursuit of an escaped prisoner is a particular favorite and considered by many to be his best. The dangerously polar feel of the UP winter is perhaps one of the most important 'characters' in the novel, but Sheriff Del Maki is a character you will remember for a long time. In fact, I keep hoping Smolens will bring him back in another novel. For now, however, COLD gets my very highest recommendation.
Insightful look into sibling rivalry, compassion, and daily life in a remote rural town in Michigan's snowy Upper Peninsula. With limited education, and dead end jobs, drugs, sex, and drinking provide an escape from the boredom of day to day life for the 20 something residents. For the adults, who chose to live and work in this harsh environment, the outdoors, independence, and solitude are central to their souls, although some chose to profit by work outside the law. When one 20 something brother walks away from his offsite prison duty, his struggle to survive and return to a better time, before the crime, brings him to a new appreciation of life as he interacts with various characters along his journey home.
Set in Michigan's cold, harsh Upper Peninsula, this third novel by Smolens (Angel's Head, etc.) uses its frigid backdrop as the perfect setting for an astute examination of six lives wrecked by fate, betrayal and tragedy. Norman Haas, an inmate at a nearby prison, turns up nearly frozen and starved on the isolated property of Liesl Tiomenen, a widow whose life was derailed by the deaths of her husband and daughter in a car crash. Liesl has a gun, and she decides to escort Norman into town on foot, since the snow is too deep for driving. When she falls and can't get up again, Norman leaves her alone in the snow. Though he was jailed for assaulting his older outlaw brother, Warren, and pill-popping girlfriend, Noel, who were cheating on show more him together, Norman still loves Noel and is determined to return and set things straight. Heading home through a relentless blizzard, he picks up Noel and their three-year-old daughter, Lorraine, and together the three hole up in a lodge deep in the snowy woods. Meanwhile, Liesl has been rescued; recovering, she joins forces with dogged local sheriff Del Maki to find Norman, though both suspect he got a raw deal from the law. When all of the major players including treacherous Warren and Noel's sinister father come together for the final confrontation, nothing prepares the reader for the startling chain of events that lead to a violent, shattering ending. show less
This started out fine. Most of the characters were not very likeable and there was a lot of violence between the men, some for no reason. A different kind of book than I am used to reading.
Een man ontsnapt uit de gevangenis omdat hij wil weten wat er echt is voorgevallen tijdens de gebeurtenissen waarvoor hij is veroordeeld.
Jan 11, 2008Dutch
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Author Information
16 Works 435 Members
John Smolens is the director of Northern Michigan University's Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing Program.
Common Knowledge
- People/Characters
- Norman Haas; Liesl Tiomenen; Del Maki; Eldon Waters; Noel Pronovost; Warren Haas (show all 8); Woo-San; Rejean Pronovost
- Important places
- Michigan, USA; Upper Peninsula, Michigan, USA; North Eicher, Michigan, USA
- Blurbers
- Jim Harrison; William Martin
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Statistics
- Members
- 132
- Popularity
- 246,706
- Reviews
- 7
- Rating
- (3.65)
- Languages
- Dutch, English, Italian
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 11
- ASINs
- 1































































