FICTION: Heart-pounding novel about starting over is set in Alaskan wilderness in '70s.
We know
the literary drill: Unassuming woman facing insurmountable challenges
rises to the occasion in an inspiring journey of courage and pluck. Oh,
and with a touch of romance.
In her
bestselling 2015 novel “The Nightingale,” Kristin Hannah gave us
Isabelle, who joins the French Resistance in World War II to lead downed
airmen across treacherous mountains with pluck and courage. It’s a
great book about a strong woman — but almost too strong. You rooted for
Isabelle, but you couldn’t imagine yourself in her position.
Leni is different.
Leni is
the teenage voice of Hannah’s latest novel, “The Great Alone.” In 1974,
Leni and her parents move to Homer, Alaska, for a fresh start.
Her
mother, the acquiescent Cora, is estranged from her rich parents, who
objected to her marrying Ernt, a vibrantly free spirit before returning
from Vietnam, where he was a POW. Now he drinks to dim memories. He
can’t hold a job. His temper is hair-trigger.
He says
Alaska will give him a place “where I can breathe again,” and so the
family once again packs up and moves — moves back in time, actually, to a
log cabin without electricity or plumbing, where you carry a gun to the
outhouse when bears are active, where you smoke fish and eke vegetables
from greenhouses and spend every waking minute of the four non-winter
months preparing for the eight months of darkness and isolation.
At first,
such purpose reinvigorates Ernt as he bonds with the neighbors’
survivalist spirit. Leni makes a friend in school, Matthew, from one of
Alaska’s founding families. Cora begins to relax.
Peace
can’t last, of course. Ernt resents Matthew’s father for his success and
ambition. He mines a more paranoid vein in the survivalists’
perseverance. He drinks more, becomes more jealous. Violent. Leni
realizes where the odd bruises she’s seen for years on her mother came
from.
The
literary drill would have Leni saving her family, by stealth and
cunning, courage and pluck. And surely, she does what she can.
But Hannah
has created a complex and agonizingly relatable character. Leni is
devoted to Cora, but she’s now in love with Matthew and takes chances
that endanger her. Their isolation keeps her from standing up to Ernt,
yet she won’t abandon her mother.
Hannah has
created an atmosphere of brooding paranoia and simmering violence that
can set your heart racing. Anticipated plot twists unravel unexpectedly.
Leni is, by all marks, the strong woman here. But she’s how many of us
would be strong: in fits and starts, undone by errors of judgment and
misplaced trust.
There is
another character here: the almost human presence of Alaska. The
author’s parents were themselves hippie homesteaders of sorts on the
Kenai River, and her own experience lends an authentic foundation to
this compelling saga of domestic violence, determination and destiny.
Kim Ode is a feature writer for the Star Tribune. On Twitter: @Odewrites.
The Great Alone
By: Kristin Hannah.
Publisher: St. Martin's Press, 440 pages, $28.99.
By: Kristin Hannah.
Publisher: St. Martin's Press, 440 pages, $28.99.

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