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Review Excerpts
Jackson Free Press - June 10, 2009
"Woodsburner deftly weaves big thoughts about fate, religion,
and commerce with the burgeoning adventure of America between the
Revolutionary and Civil wars, and an unexpected good measure of
humor. It’s a novel carried effortlessly by Pipkin’s engaging,
provocative prose and the often-surprising stories of his
characters, and culminates in an exciting battle of epic proportions
against nature itself. ....readers will be pulled inexorably toward
the heat ignited by the fires of each character’s story. Whether
stoked by a simple urge for connections or long-subsumed desire for
glory, fire defines the characters, yet it is their all-too human
passions and foibles that are at the heart of “Woods Burner.” It is
a book that will keep you up all night racing toward the last page,
and then will leave you longing for more. Do yourself a favor and
give up a day for this one."
-- Ronni Mott
NPR.org – May 26, 2009
True fact: One year before he built his cabin on Walden Pond, Henry
David Thoreau accidentally scorched 300 acres of the Concord woods.
In Woodsburner, John Pipkin's lyrical debut novel, Pipkin re-creates
the events of that day from the perspective of Thoreau and several
other Concord residents — an opium-addicted preacher, a pompous
bookseller and, in some of the novel's most flat-out beautiful
passages, a love-starved Norwegian farmhand — who will see their
lives irrevocably changed by the fire.
Pipkin's characters are full of convincing contradictions: His
Thoreau, for example, spends the day vacillating between guilt over
the accident and defiantly rationalizing his incautious actions. The
author has some thoughtful things to say about the notion of
American freedom, and the conflagration that serves as Woodsburner's
central metaphor allows him to say them in language that is at once
vividly precise and richly allusive.
Christian Science Monitor – May 25, 2009
John Pipkin has had the great good sense to turn this somehow
little-known event into a novel, Woodsburner, that manages to be
both philosophical and a rollicking good read... “Woodsburner” is
Pipkin’s first novel, but, with its complex structure and top-notch
prose, there’s not a page that reads like the work of a novice...
-- Yvonne Zipp
San Francisco Chronicle - May 23, 2009
...John Pipkin's excellent debut novel... One of the most enjoyable
aspects of "Woodsburner" is Pipkin's language. It is precise and
period-worthy, quite delicious... "Woodsburner" doesn't read like
debut fiction. It is a mature historical work by a writer who
happened upon a small footnote in American history and fanned a
flicker into an imaginative, complex novel that humanizes an
American icon.
-- Steve Bennett
Library Journal Starred review - May 15,2009
This is a powerfully rendered debut about an infamous moment in
American literary history: Henry David Thoreau accidentally starting
a massive fire that burned 300 acres of woods near Concord, MA, in
1844. Significantly, this happened just a year before Thoreau
removed himself from society, built his cabin, and began work on his
masterpiece, Walden. Pipkin does an excellent job of bringing the
people and environs of historic Concord to life. There are three
other major characters in the novel - an orphaned Norwegian
farmhand, a Puritan-style preacher, and a bookseller and aspiring
playwright - and each ends up influencing Thoreau in some
significant way as they fight the fire together. All are skillfully
drawn. The novel ends just days after the fire, with the young
Thoreau humiliated and the people of Concord outraged, and Pipkin
suggests that responsibility for this fire is what drove Thoreau
into the woods and into deep reflection about nature, self-reliance,
and living. A fascinating fictional exploration of a seminal
American event.
Times Picayune - May 13, 2009
John Pipkin's brilliant first novel takes as its inspiration a line
from Henry David Thoreau's journals, written in 1850: "I once set
fire to the woods... It was a glorious spectacle, and I was the only
one there to enjoy it... [Woodsburner] crackles with heat and
energy, as we see these characters tested by the flames, scorched by
their passions, beliefs and hopes. John Pipkin uses Thoreau's own
sentence like a match, to spark a vision of a younger America poised
at a moment of self-definition.
-- Susan Larson
New York Times Book Review - May 3, 2009
“Thoreau's biographers commonly have made little of the incident,
but John Pipkin takes the lighting of that fateful match as the
starting point of his intelligent and often lyrical first novel,
Woodsburner…. As the fire spreads, his Thoreau springs to life,
meditating defensively about accident and intention…and when Pipkin
surreptitiously incorporates sections of Thoreau's journals into his
character's perspective, he creates a Thoreau who rationalizes with
adolescent piquancy…. Pipkin also beguilingly conjures as assortment
of appealing characters who find themselves in or near the Concord
woods the day Thoreau set fire to them…. Since Woodsburner is, in
effect, a wily fictional prequel to 'Walden,' Pipkin's motley
characters, taken together, suggest how our vintage Thoreau, a
Thoreau of history as well as fantasy, came to be.”
The Dallas Morning News – May 3, 2009
In September 2003, Harper's magazine ran a "Harper's Index" item
that read: "Estimated acres of forest Henry David Thoreau burned
down in 1844 trying to cook fish he had caught for dinner: 300."
That line became the seed for Austinite John Pipkin's wonderful
debut novel, Woods Burner, which recounts the day of the fire from
the perspective of Thoreau and the members of the community who come
together to battle the conflagration, one that threatened to raze
Concord... the story is infused with moments of genuine drama, peril
and suspense. Woods Burner is edifying, engaging and satisfying, an
exemplary illustration of how fiction can illuminate the past, bring
history to life and make it feel as fresh and relevant as the
present day.
-- Edward Nawotka
Amazon.com – May 1, 2009
Best of the Month, May 2009: The early American tree-hugger and
pioneering thinker Henry David Thoreau did a bad, bad thing back on
April 30, 1844. A year before he settled into the “simple life” at
Walden Pond, he struck a match to start a cooking fire in the dry
woods around Concord, Massachusetts and accidentally ignited a
forest fire that consumed 300 acres. The events of that chaotic day
appear to have altered the course of Thoreau’s life and American
history. More recently, this historical footnote sparked the
creation of Woodsburner, a terrific debut novel from John Pipkin.
Woodsburner offers a nuanced portrait of a young and less
recognizable Thoreau, whose philosophy begins to materialize as the
flames lay waste. The talented Pipkin simultaneously presents a
vivid picture of mid-19th century New England on the cusp of
unstoppable change through a cast of characters: a sadistic and
misguided preacher, a desperate bookseller, and an isolated
immigrant laborer harboring painful secrets. Their lives are forever
changed by the fire which serves as a powerful metaphor for the
destructive passions that consume us, as well as the eternal
struggles between human society and the natural world.
-- Lauren Nemroff
Minneapolis Star Tribune – May 1, 2009
Pipkin's research into the event and the era seems impeccable.
The book is rife with interesting historical trivia: how lead
pencils were made, the proper use of a mulling poker, how raw coffee
beans were roasted. And the author's language nicely captures the
tone and diction of 19th-century American English. ...This is an
ambitious and complex fiction... ...Pipkin's "Woodsburner" is an
impressive debut.
-- Gordon Weaver
The Austin Chronicle - May 1, 2009
"...the America that Pipkin paints is a unique one: a nation
founded on freedom and citizens that find ways to shackle themselves
or are confounded by the myriad options that America's seemingly
unlimited resources engendered."
-- James Renovitch
Washington Post – April 22, 2009
The ingenious nature of this structure grows clearer with each
haunting chapter. The fire that "flows like brilliant liquid"
through Concord Woods is a natural engine for a terrifically
exciting story, and Pipkin conveys such a visceral impression of the
"clever flames crouching in the branches" that you can feel the heat
radiating off these pages...
...
You would expect Thoreau to dominate this story, but he falls away
for long sections. When he does appear, though, he speaks and thinks
in a mixture of innocence, self-righteousness, apprehension and
nobility.
...
But just as captivating are those characters Pipkin has invented,
men and women consumed by their own passions. They provide a
fascinating impression of the nation when it was still young and
swelling and struggling to define itself. They see the Concord fire
through their own private flames -- fire is everywhere in this novel
-- and Pipkin allows them to brush up against each other in the most
subtle and ingenious ways.
...
New England religious fever is represented by an itinerant preacher,
a Gothic figure smelling of brimstone and appalled by Ralph Waldo
Emerson's misty brand of Unitarianis.
...
Meanwhile, a snobbish bookstore owner has just arrived from Boston
to survey his new store in Concord when the call goes up for
firefighters. Eliot Calvert is a merchant worn down by the forces of
commerce, the sort of figure suggested by Thoreau's stinging
critique of the businessman in "Walden."
...
But from start to finish "Woodsburner" belongs to a strange farmhand
named Oddmund Hus (Odd for short, and for real). This painfully shy
young man comes to the New World in the novel's most spectacular
conflagration, an explosion in Boston Harbor that propels him to
shore even as it kills the rest of his Norwegian family. His
tumultuous upbringing in America and his efforts to tame his sexual
urges display the remarkable texture of Pipkin's storytelling.
...
At the end of the day, when the embers begin to cool and the various
story lines in "Woodsburner" draw to a close, Odd is the character
who burns brightest in this profound and thoughtful novel, but all
of them will linger in your mind.
-- Ron Charles
Kirkus Starred Rewiev - April 1, 2009
“A superb historical fiction as well as a complex and
provocative novel of ideas—Pulitzer Prize material.”
Full review:
An inglorious episode in the life of 19th-century author and
environmental saint Henry David Thoreau is the subject of Pipkin’s
impressive debut novel.In 1844, a year prior to his memorable tenure
at Walden Pond, while hiking with a friend on the fringe of woods
not far from bustling Concord, Mass., Thoreau impulsively lit a
match in dry weather during a high wind, starting a fire that would
consume 300 acres of valuable forest and farmland. An initial focus
on Henry’s guilt and panic unfolds into ongoing portrayals of the
lives of three other men variously affected by the conflagration, as
independently lived and as briefly linked to the life of Thoreau.
Norwegian immigrant farmhand Oddmund Hus, still haunted by images of
the fire ignited when the ship that had borne his family to America
exploded in Boston Harbor, yearns for his dour employer’s buxom
Irish wife, and agonizes over whether the recent brush fire he
tended had made him the inadvertent “woodsburner.” Boston bookseller
Eliot Calvert, painfully aware of compromises made to support his
demanding family, assists volunteer firefighters manfully, but
envisions the catastrophe in relation to the unwritten climax of his
(hilariously jejune) stage play. And insanely jealous preacher Caleb
Dowdy, long estranged from his more temperate clergyman father,
seeks purification for his own sin (withholding the promise of
salvation from an innocent man falsely accused of child molestation)
in the cleansing power of the great fire. Pipkin tells their stories
in a breathlessly exciting present tense, layering in substantial
information about the credos and conflicts of the new England
Transcendentalists, only occasionally lapsing into expository
overkill. The author succeeds brilliantly in portraying a young
country struggling to shape its idealistic energies into something
concrete and enduring. The consequent successes and failures are
movingly encapsulated in “Odd” Hus’s emotional, climactic vision of
destruction, rebirth and renewal.A superb historical fiction as well
as a complex and provocative novel of ideas—Pulitzer Prize material.
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