Genre Fiction
- Publisher : Vintage
- Published : 20 Jul 2021
- Pages : 352
- ISBN-10 : 0525565353
- ISBN-13 : 9780525565352
- Language : English
Northernmost: A Novel (Eide Family Series)
ONE OF HOUSTON CHRONICLE'S BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR
From the acclaimed author of Wintering: a thrilling ode to the spirit of adventure and the vagaries of loss and love.
"A beautiful, big-hearted, triumphant novel."-Nathan Hill, author of The Nix
In 1897, Odd Einar Eide returns home from a near-death experience in the Arctic only to discover his own funeral underway. His wife, Inger, stunned to see him alive, is slow to warm back up to him, having spent many sleepless nights convinced she had lost both him and their daughter, Thea, who traveled to America two years earlier but has yet to send even a single letter back to them in Hammerfest, their small Norwegian town at the top of the earth.
More than a century later, Greta Nansen has finally begun to admit to herself that her marriage is over. Desperately unhappy and unfulfilled, she makes the decision to follow her husband from their home in Minnesota to Oslo, where he has traveled for work, to end it once and for all. But on impulse, she diverts her travels to Hammerfest: the town of her ancestors, the town where her great-great-grandmother Thea was born-and for some reason never returned to. Braiding together two remarkable stories of love and survival, Northernmost wades into the darkest recesses of the human heart and celebrates the remarkable ability of humans to endure nearly unimaginable trials.
From the acclaimed author of Wintering: a thrilling ode to the spirit of adventure and the vagaries of loss and love.
"A beautiful, big-hearted, triumphant novel."-Nathan Hill, author of The Nix
In 1897, Odd Einar Eide returns home from a near-death experience in the Arctic only to discover his own funeral underway. His wife, Inger, stunned to see him alive, is slow to warm back up to him, having spent many sleepless nights convinced she had lost both him and their daughter, Thea, who traveled to America two years earlier but has yet to send even a single letter back to them in Hammerfest, their small Norwegian town at the top of the earth.
More than a century later, Greta Nansen has finally begun to admit to herself that her marriage is over. Desperately unhappy and unfulfilled, she makes the decision to follow her husband from their home in Minnesota to Oslo, where he has traveled for work, to end it once and for all. But on impulse, she diverts her travels to Hammerfest: the town of her ancestors, the town where her great-great-grandmother Thea was born-and for some reason never returned to. Braiding together two remarkable stories of love and survival, Northernmost wades into the darkest recesses of the human heart and celebrates the remarkable ability of humans to endure nearly unimaginable trials.
Editorial Reviews
"Engaging and memorable. . . . The language is lyrical and often poetic, almost sounding as if Mary Shelley herself had come back to describe the frozen north." -San Francisco Chronicle
"Geye imbues isolating bleakness with a perverse beauty . . . Geye captures winter so well in its physical and emotional consequences. That this can leave a reader with a bit of a chill in both body and soul is a considered risk." -Minneapolis Star Tribune
"An Odyssean tale. . . . Masterful." -Houston Chronicle
"We might as well give Peter Geye the Nobel Prize for winter, or declare him the poet laureate of snow. For no other writer so skillfully captures landscapes of glacier and tundra-both their bleakness and their particular beauty. To read him is to feel the ache of a blizzard on your skin. But in Northernmost, he has also given us an exhilarating tale of adventure and love and heartache and faith, a story of overcoming the most trying ordeals imaginable. Partly a tale of heroic survival, partly a meticulously researched history, and partly an epic romance, Northernmost is, most of all, a beautiful, big-hearted, triumphant novel." -Nathan Hill, author of The Nix
"Northernmost fascinated me with its frozen landscapes and Arctic winters, and it warmed me with the tenderness of its storytelling and humanity of its characters. Peter Geye has written a tremendously satisfying family saga about the tenacity of love amid the unpredictable, ungovernable forces that act on our lives." -Maggie Shipstead, author of Great Circle
"A study of marriage and family across time and geographies. . . . Northernmost is rich in history, adventure, and love." -Kao Kalia Yang, author of The Song Poet
"Peter Geye may well be the William Faulkner of the North Country." -William Kent Krueger, author of This Tender Land
"A marvel of storytelling." -Tom Franklin, author of Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter
"Evocative. . . . [A] literary yet action-packed novel that weaves together two stories, separated by a century." -Historical Novel Society
"Impressive. . . . A memorable, powerful tale of endurance and ancestral connection." -Publishers Weekly
"Breathtaking. . . . A beautiful ode to the enduring human spirit." -BookPage (starred review)
"Elegant . . . Geye artfully spans 120 years of the Eide family's story." -Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
"Geye imbues isolating bleakness with a perverse beauty . . . Geye captures winter so well in its physical and emotional consequences. That this can leave a reader with a bit of a chill in both body and soul is a considered risk." -Minneapolis Star Tribune
"An Odyssean tale. . . . Masterful." -Houston Chronicle
"We might as well give Peter Geye the Nobel Prize for winter, or declare him the poet laureate of snow. For no other writer so skillfully captures landscapes of glacier and tundra-both their bleakness and their particular beauty. To read him is to feel the ache of a blizzard on your skin. But in Northernmost, he has also given us an exhilarating tale of adventure and love and heartache and faith, a story of overcoming the most trying ordeals imaginable. Partly a tale of heroic survival, partly a meticulously researched history, and partly an epic romance, Northernmost is, most of all, a beautiful, big-hearted, triumphant novel." -Nathan Hill, author of The Nix
"Northernmost fascinated me with its frozen landscapes and Arctic winters, and it warmed me with the tenderness of its storytelling and humanity of its characters. Peter Geye has written a tremendously satisfying family saga about the tenacity of love amid the unpredictable, ungovernable forces that act on our lives." -Maggie Shipstead, author of Great Circle
"A study of marriage and family across time and geographies. . . . Northernmost is rich in history, adventure, and love." -Kao Kalia Yang, author of The Song Poet
"Peter Geye may well be the William Faulkner of the North Country." -William Kent Krueger, author of This Tender Land
"A marvel of storytelling." -Tom Franklin, author of Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter
"Evocative. . . . [A] literary yet action-packed novel that weaves together two stories, separated by a century." -Historical Novel Society
"Impressive. . . . A memorable, powerful tale of endurance and ancestral connection." -Publishers Weekly
"Breathtaking. . . . A beautiful ode to the enduring human spirit." -BookPage (starred review)
"Elegant . . . Geye artfully spans 120 years of the Eide family's story." -Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
Readers Top Reviews
Ronald C. Griebellro
Love his previous books....Too much sex and too much Norwegian in this book.....disappointed
Uncle Joni
I've read all of Peter Geye's books and this is THE BEST. But it would help the reader to start at the beginning with 'Safe from the Sea'
Diking77
Another extraordinary novel from this author who literally transports you on this cold journey with him, while providing the warmth of familiarity and descriptions that will stay with you while you await his next great read.
India Ballinger
I simply loved this book. Every page is replete with beauty, longing and luminous writing that transports the reader. The characters are sympathetic and complete in how they tell their stories. The weaving together of themes of loss, isolation, adventure, spiritual trials and tribulations, and redemption is prosaic and masterful. The geographic settings, local color, and weather were beautifully rendered. I love stories that take place in wintry, stark places. The love scenes were surprisingly well articulated. I hated for the book to end and will look forward to Peter Geye’s next masterpiece.
Short Excerpt Teaser
[1897]
I am not the first man who ever buttoned his coat and boarded a ship and followed his silence north. Nor am I the first made mouthy by what discovered him there. Indeed, how many stories have men like me lived to tell? If life is what I found on my return, among the wooden crosses and gravestones below the Hammerfest hillside.
I remember that wan early morning, the sun too low and faint to hold the fog at sea. The tender's oarlocks squawked in awful harmony with the gulls tilting above. The hills were scabrous gray, the scree poised as ever to bury the village. I remember all this. And old Magnus Moen on the oars, a man my age and one I'd known all my life, speaking no word to me. He only beat his oars against the harbor water while muttering into his coat.
I remember Bengt Bjornsen's horse and carriage, too, rolling along Grønnevoldsgaden. I could see his charge. A woman dressed in black seated beside him and the pastor in his frock standing on the back rail. I mouthed a prayer, that this meager procession was not for my daughter, gone two years. The thought of her turned my eyes to the mailbags sitting above the bilge on the deck of the tender. We'd not heard from Thea since we sent her off. Not one word, kind or otherwise. For all we knew she was drowned or buried.
By the time Magnus tied off on the wharf, the horse and carriage had disappeared. It wasn't yet eleven o'clock as I stepped ashore and turned to look from where I'd come. As though I could see those hundreds of miles behind me. But all was gone. Lost in the fog if not in my memory. The mailboat Thor out at anchor? The mountains of Sørø and the sea beyond? Even the birds and the sound of the birds? All was gone. Only North remained. I could point North and remember the snow and still believe in it. I did believe in it-and not much else.
Magnus tossed the mailbags at my feet, then climbed from the tender and stood beside me on the wharf. I felt in my pockets as though I had a krone to offer him. But all I found was my pipe and pouch, so I packed the bowl and Magnus offered me a light and we stood together and smoked.
"There's a bit of the Draugen about ja, Odd Einar." Magnus thumbed his hat and looked out from beneath his bushy eyebrows. He puffed on his pipe and shook his head. "It's a hell of a thing. Coming back here on a day such as this. Take a slow walk home, ja?" He pushed his hat back off his head and ran a knobby hand over his balding crown. "Give them a chance to see you." He snuffed out his pipe and tied a second line to a cleat on the wharf. "And God bless you, friend. God bless you and Inger."
I watched Magnus set his hat right. He put his reindeer hide gloves on and shouldered the mail sacks. He turned to leave but then set his load down once more, slipped a glove off, reached into his pocket, and pulled out a few coins. He picked from them two øre and offered them to me. I felt my face flush and tucked my cheeks into my coat's collar. "I'm all set, friend," I said.
"Odd Einar, stop at Bengt's bakery before you head home. Buy a loaf and some butter. I've known you since we were runts. I don't like the look of you now. A hungry man is a sad thing."
He pushed the money into my hand and put his glove on again, slung the mail sacks over his shoulder, and this time walked off. He didn't whistle, Old Magnus.
The Grønnevoldsgaden was swallowed by fog as I walked up it. The whole village was, as though it burned for the second time. On the corner of the Strandgaden, the electric streetlights flickered on and Inger's auntie was standing there on the cobbles with her cane and palsied foot. She looked up and saw me, turned and limped away. I tried to call out, but there was no voice in me.
As if mocking my dumbness, a pair of shrieking gulls banked low. I watched them wing back toward the harbor and then crossed the street and walked to the bakery. Its dark windows were filled with loaves covered by flour sacks. Baskets of Bengt's pepparkaka and kanelbolle were sitting on the far end of the counter. On the other, jars of butter and jams were stacked in small pyramids. I felt the coins in my pocket, and stepped to the door. It was locked, so I stepped back into the street and closed my eyes and felt the gnawing in my bowels.
I stood there long enough for what remained of me to notice its reflection in the bakery window: ugly and gaunt and tired as the pilings on the wharf. It would take a month of Inger's black pot to bring me back to life. With just that thought I went to the entry next to the bakery and opened it and climbed the narrow staircase and stood atop the landing and knocked on my door....
I am not the first man who ever buttoned his coat and boarded a ship and followed his silence north. Nor am I the first made mouthy by what discovered him there. Indeed, how many stories have men like me lived to tell? If life is what I found on my return, among the wooden crosses and gravestones below the Hammerfest hillside.
I remember that wan early morning, the sun too low and faint to hold the fog at sea. The tender's oarlocks squawked in awful harmony with the gulls tilting above. The hills were scabrous gray, the scree poised as ever to bury the village. I remember all this. And old Magnus Moen on the oars, a man my age and one I'd known all my life, speaking no word to me. He only beat his oars against the harbor water while muttering into his coat.
I remember Bengt Bjornsen's horse and carriage, too, rolling along Grønnevoldsgaden. I could see his charge. A woman dressed in black seated beside him and the pastor in his frock standing on the back rail. I mouthed a prayer, that this meager procession was not for my daughter, gone two years. The thought of her turned my eyes to the mailbags sitting above the bilge on the deck of the tender. We'd not heard from Thea since we sent her off. Not one word, kind or otherwise. For all we knew she was drowned or buried.
By the time Magnus tied off on the wharf, the horse and carriage had disappeared. It wasn't yet eleven o'clock as I stepped ashore and turned to look from where I'd come. As though I could see those hundreds of miles behind me. But all was gone. Lost in the fog if not in my memory. The mailboat Thor out at anchor? The mountains of Sørø and the sea beyond? Even the birds and the sound of the birds? All was gone. Only North remained. I could point North and remember the snow and still believe in it. I did believe in it-and not much else.
Magnus tossed the mailbags at my feet, then climbed from the tender and stood beside me on the wharf. I felt in my pockets as though I had a krone to offer him. But all I found was my pipe and pouch, so I packed the bowl and Magnus offered me a light and we stood together and smoked.
"There's a bit of the Draugen about ja, Odd Einar." Magnus thumbed his hat and looked out from beneath his bushy eyebrows. He puffed on his pipe and shook his head. "It's a hell of a thing. Coming back here on a day such as this. Take a slow walk home, ja?" He pushed his hat back off his head and ran a knobby hand over his balding crown. "Give them a chance to see you." He snuffed out his pipe and tied a second line to a cleat on the wharf. "And God bless you, friend. God bless you and Inger."
I watched Magnus set his hat right. He put his reindeer hide gloves on and shouldered the mail sacks. He turned to leave but then set his load down once more, slipped a glove off, reached into his pocket, and pulled out a few coins. He picked from them two øre and offered them to me. I felt my face flush and tucked my cheeks into my coat's collar. "I'm all set, friend," I said.
"Odd Einar, stop at Bengt's bakery before you head home. Buy a loaf and some butter. I've known you since we were runts. I don't like the look of you now. A hungry man is a sad thing."
He pushed the money into my hand and put his glove on again, slung the mail sacks over his shoulder, and this time walked off. He didn't whistle, Old Magnus.
The Grønnevoldsgaden was swallowed by fog as I walked up it. The whole village was, as though it burned for the second time. On the corner of the Strandgaden, the electric streetlights flickered on and Inger's auntie was standing there on the cobbles with her cane and palsied foot. She looked up and saw me, turned and limped away. I tried to call out, but there was no voice in me.
As if mocking my dumbness, a pair of shrieking gulls banked low. I watched them wing back toward the harbor and then crossed the street and walked to the bakery. Its dark windows were filled with loaves covered by flour sacks. Baskets of Bengt's pepparkaka and kanelbolle were sitting on the far end of the counter. On the other, jars of butter and jams were stacked in small pyramids. I felt the coins in my pocket, and stepped to the door. It was locked, so I stepped back into the street and closed my eyes and felt the gnawing in my bowels.
I stood there long enough for what remained of me to notice its reflection in the bakery window: ugly and gaunt and tired as the pilings on the wharf. It would take a month of Inger's black pot to bring me back to life. With just that thought I went to the entry next to the bakery and opened it and climbed the narrow staircase and stood atop the landing and knocked on my door....