Deep River, 9780802148971
Paperback
Finnish siblings chase dreams and face hardship in 19th-century America.

Deep River

  • Paperback

    736 pages

  • Release Date

    14 July 2020

Summary

Three Finnish siblings head for the logging fields of nineteenth-century America in the New York Times-bestselling author’s “commanding historical epic” (Washington Post).

Born into a farm family, the three Koski siblings–Ilmari, Matti, and Aino–are raised to maintain their grit and resiliency in the face of hardship. This lesson in sisu takes on special meaning when their father is arrested by imperial Russian authorities, never to be seen again. Lu…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9780802148971
ISBN-10:0802148972
Author:Karl Marlantes
Publisher:Grove Press / Atlantic Monthly Press
Imprint:Grove Press / Atlantic Monthly Press
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:736
Release Date:14 July 2020
Weight:10g
Dimensions:210mm x 140mm x 39mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

Praise for Deep River:

“Marlantes conveys the elements, arcana and dangerous romance of logging superbly. His descriptions of logging itself–the ingenious mechanics of taking down trees and the skill of experienced loggers–are wonderfully detailed, dramatic and exhilarating…Mighty physical, social and economic forces operate the plot of this novel, buffeting its characters, raising them up, flinging them down, twisting their fates together. Deep River is a big American novel.”–Wall Street Journal

“Deep River is an engrossing and commanding historical epic about one immigrant family’s shifting fortunes…a feat of lavish storytelling.”–Washington Post

“Marlantes poignantly depicts the intimacies of personal dramas that echo the twentieth century’s unprecedented political storms and yet in surprising ways reprise Finland’s oldest mythologies…An unforgettable novel.” – Booklist, (starred review)

“As a portrait of a complicated American era, and one family’s mighty struggle against it, the novel is both fascinating and fierce. And well worth the hours it asks of its reader.”–San Francisco Chronicle

“Deep River seems a work born from Willa Cather by way of Upton Sinclair. But this new book is its own animal, and it’s something of a masterpiece…In Deep River, [Aino] takes her place beside Antonia Shimerda as one of the great heroines of literature.”–BookPage (starred review)

“Inspired by family history, Marlantes (Matterhorn) offers a sprawling, painstakingly realistic novel about Finnish immigrants in the Pacific Northwest during the first half of the 20th century… Marlantes’s epic is packed with intriguing detail about Finnish culture, Northwest landscapes, and 20th-century American history, making for a vivid immigrant family chronicle.” –Publishers Weekly

“A riveting read in the classic western literature tradition of Wallace Stegner’s The Big Rock Candy Mountain, delivering the rich pleasures of an epic story well told…The realism of Deep River comes with a magical tinge.”–Oregonian

“An admirable work, this monomyth is dense…with Marlantes’s gift for lyricism and evocative language.”–Library Journal

Praise for Karl Marlantes:

“A raw, brilliant account of war that may well serve as a final exorcism for one of the most painful passages in American history … One of the most profound and devastating novels ever to come out of Vietnam–or any war.”–New York Times Book Review, on Matterhorn

“Marlantes’ story is so intense that there were times reading it when I thought I could not stand to turn the page … Vladimir Nabokov once said that the greatest books are those you read not just with your heart or your mind, but with your spine. This is one for the spine.”–Philadelphia Inquirer, on Matterhorn

“Carefully constructed and beautifully realized … Filled with truth, wisdom, love, and a rich vein of dark gallows humor.”–Newsweek, on Matterhorn

“Matterhorn will take your heart and sometimes even your breath away.”–NPR’s All Things Considered, on Matterhorn

“Superb … A treasure … It’s a bloody Vietnam epic, to be sure. But it’s also a full-blooded inspection of the human spirit.”–Christian Science Monitor, on Matterhorn

“Visceral … Evocative … [Marlantes] pitches us into a harrowing narrative we won’t soon forget.”–USA Today, on Matterhorn

“A powerhouse: tense, brutal, honest.”–Time, on Matterhorn

“Engrossing.”–Seattle Times, on Matterhorn

“Vivid … Elegant … It tolls in the reader’s mind and leaves a long, haunting echo.”–Minneapolis Star Tribune, on Matterhorn

“Lush, compelling, and tragic … An unflinching story.”–Denver Post, on Matterhorn

“That rare modern novel destined to become a classic.”–Vince Flynn, on Matterhorn

“A novel of great authority and humanity. It builds inexorably to a devastating and magnificent final movement.” –Charles Frazier, on Matterhorn

“Marlantes brings candor and wrenching self-analysis to bear on his combat experiences in Vietnam.”–New Yorker, on What It Is Like to Go to War

“A precisely crafted and bracingly honest book.”–Atlantic, on What It Is Like to Go to War

About The Author

Karl Marlantes

Karl Marlantes graduated from Yale University and was a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford University, before serving as a Marine in Vietnam, where he was awarded the Navy Cross, the Bronze Star, two Navy Commendation Medals for valor, two Purple Hearts, and ten air medals. He is the bestselling author of Matterhorn and What It Is Like to Go to War. He lives in rural Washington.

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