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Nov 2, 2024 5:39 AM

Author:Emily Ruskovich

Idaho

**WINNER OF THE INTERNATIONAL DUBLIN LITERARY AWARD**

‘I love Idaho’ Paula Hawkins, bestselling author of The Girl on the Train

This sharp, stunning debut novel and Irish bestseller about grief, loss and redemption is your next literary obsession

One hot August day a family drives to a mountain clearing to collect birch wood. Jenny, the mother, is in charge of lopping any small limbs off the logs with a hatchet. Wade, the father, does the stacking. The two daughters, June and May, aged nine and six, drink lemonade, swat away horseflies, bicker, sing snatches of songs as they while away the time.

But then Jenny does something unspeakable, an act so extreme it will scatter the family in every different direction, and leave dark unanswered questions for years to come.

‘Unflinching…multi-layered storytelling that is both beautiful and devastating’ Rachel Joyce, author of The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry

‘A puzzle that enthrals from the outset’ Guardian

‘Hauntingly brilliant, this book will stay with you for days after you’ve put it down’ Evening Standard, Books of the Year

Reviews

I love Idaho for the sparse beauty of its prose, the unsolvable mystery at its heart, the cleverly constructed non-linear narrative and its preoccupations… which so closely match my own

—— Paula Hawkins , Guardian

Writing that has the cool sharpness of lemonade... Unflinching, unfrilly, multi-layered storytelling that is both beautiful and devastating

—— Rachel Joyce

Hauntingly brilliant, this book will stay with you for days after you’ve put it down

—— Evening Standard, Books of the Year

You're in masterly hands here... will remind many of the great Idaho novel, Marilynne Robinson's Housekeeping... wrenching and beautiful

—— New York Times Book Review

From the first page it is clear that Ruskovich’s poetic, spare writing would be enough to compel on its own, but this extraordinary story of a violent event that decimates a young family in northern Idaho is the true engine here. It’s a puzzle that enthrals from the outset.

—— Lucy Clark , Guardian

It’s a set-up that reads straight out of the darkest of psychological thrillers … That an act of such brutality inspires storytelling as beautiful as this is reason enough for this debut novel to stand out from the crowd

—— Independent

At first glance this novel looks like a typical example of the 'post-catastrophe' genre... In fact, Idaho is deeper and broader -- and far more interesting... Ruskovich is not afraid of tackling the messy ambiguity of 'real' life, nor the difficulty of truly knowing another person, and she delivers her revelations with assurance and skill

—— Kate Saunders , The Times

Ruskovich’s writing is well crafted and poetic, particularly when evoking nature and weather in the backwoods, and the contrast with Jenny’s claustrophobic prison half-life is extremely well done. A sad, involving read.

—— Fanny Blake , Daily Mail

Breathtakingly written, haunting and heartbreaking, Idaho lingers long after it’s finished

—— Louise Rhind-Tutt , iNews

Devastating... a textured, emotionally intricate story of deliverance... Ruskovich's writing is a deft razor

—— O, The Oprah Magazine

It is two parts Donna Tartt, one part Daphne du Maurier. Ruskovich shares the former's unnerving knack for isolating her characters... and the latter's for psychological suspense and hauntings... bewitching and heady

—— Laura Freeman , Spectator

Idaho is a world of vivid particularity, a collection of evanescent traces and tracks, stains and remnants

—— Guardian

Astonishing... an exquisite examination of how the ripples from a single tragic event play out across a panoply of vividly drawn characters

—— Big Issue

Riveting… exquisitely rendered with masterful language and imagery. You leave Idaho feeling as though you have been given a rare glimpse into the souls of genuinely surprising and convincing people, as E.M. Forster would have characterized the inhabitants of this world. Idaho is a powerful and deeply moving book, an impressive debut that portends good, even great, things to come

—— Washington Post

One of the best books I've read this year... Emily Ruskovich's writing is remarkably beautiful; the descriptions of the mountain and the forest are breathtaking. And the fact that she doesn't provide clear answers, that everything is a little hazy, makes it exactly the kind of book I enjoy... The characters are complex and real, their motivations always understated... It is a wonderful book and I'll be recommending it to anyone who will listen

—— Claire Fuller, author of Our Endless Numbered Days

It’s the writing which is most striking, managing to be both spare and vibrant in what is essentially a dark novel... There’s no black and white here, no neat resolution: questions remain unanswered and it’s all the better for that

—— A Life in Books

Emily Ruskovich can communicate a world in a sentence

—— i-D

Eerie story about what the heart is capable of fathoming and what the hand is capable of executing... mesmerizing

—— Marie Claire US

Haunting, propulsive and gorgeously written, this is a debut not to be missed

—— People Magazine

A dark and poignant debut

—— Huffington Post

Fans of lush, psychological dramas like Top of the Lake or Broadchurch have their winter reading cut out for them. A provocative first novel filled to the brim with dazzling language, mystery, and a profound belief in the human capacity to love and seek forgiveness

—— Kirkus (starred review)

Shocking and heartbreaking, Ruskovich has crafted a remarkable love story and a narrative that will stay with readers

—— Publishers Weekly (starred review)

With lovely language and piercing pathos, Idaho focuses on the power of love and the possibilities of forgiveness and memory. This debut novel deals blows as large as life

—— Shelf-Awareness

In Emily Ruskovich's wizardly vision, Idaho is both a place and an emotional dimension. Haunted, haunting, her novel winds through time, braiding events and their consequences in the most unexpected and moving ways

—— Andrea Barrett, author of The Voyage of the Narwhal

A novel written like music… a chorus of rich and beautiful voices woven deep in the Idaho woods, each trying to come to their own understanding of a terrible tragedy

—— Hannah Tinti, author of The Good Thief

Emily Ruskovich has written a poem in prose, a beautiful and intricate homage to place, and a celebration of the defeats and triumphs of love. Beautifully crafted, emotionally evocative, and psychologically astute, Idaho is one of the best books I have read in a long time

—— Chinelo Okparanta, author of Under the Udala Trees

Exquisitely crafted

—— Wall Street Journal

Idaho begins with a rusted truck and ends up places you couldn’t imagine. Its language is an enchantment, its vision brutal and sublime

—— Leslie Jamison, author of The Gin Closet

Beautiful, brutal and incandescent

—— Deirdre McNamer, author of Red Rover

A strange, uncanny novel, bewitching and heady

—— Laura Freeman , Spectator

Richly rendered characters, with a well-delineated supporting cast and a strong sense of place. A debut of astonishing maturity.

—— Tim Blackburn , Guardian

This beautifully written and poetic novel is fascinating and disturbing… This is a novel which stays in the mind.

—— Dorothy Anderson , Nudge

A powerful debut novel.

—— The Mail on Sunday

I kept flipping back, over and over, rereading pages and saying ‘Oh my God’ to myself.

—— William Leith , Evening Standard

Ragnar Jónasson writes with a chilling, poetic beauty - a must-read addition to the growing canon of Iceland Noir

—— Peter James

His clues are traditional and beautifully finessed - and he keeps you turning the pages

—— The Independent on Snowblind

Distinctive blend of Nordic noir and golden age detective fiction...atmospheric...economical and evocative prose

—— The Guardian on Nightblind

Seductive ... an old-fashioned murder mystery with a strong central character and the fascinating background of a small Icelandic town cut off by snow. Ragnar does claustrophobia beautifully

—— Ann Cleeves

The ending hits the reader like a kick in the stomach

—— FRÉTTATIMINN ****

Jonasson's books have breathed new life into Nordic noir ...all the skilful plotting of an old-fashioned whodunit although it feels bitingly contemporary in setting and tone

—— Sunday Express

The threads lie in various places, the plot is well woven and the pieces in the puzzle come together well in the end. The structure is good, the main characters are believable, the story flows well, everyone is a suspect á la Agatha Christie and the solution unveils the mystery and leads the readers to the truth. But not all the truth, as some things are better left hidden

—— Morgunbladid (Icelandic newspaper)

Hulda Hermannsdottir is a welcome addition to the selection of Icelandic crime fiction protagonists . . . It is almost impossible to put the book down until the last word has been read

—— Fréttablaðið ****

Out of all of Ragnar's books, this is the one I like the most . . . The book of his which reminds me most of Agatha Christie

—— Kiljan, on The Island

A very good book, gripping and interesting, with all the threads carefully managed. Hopefully the author will publish as many books as possible with lead character Hulda

—— Vikan Magazine, on The Island

Praise for Ragnar Jónasson

—— -

No country associated with the label Nordic noir is as bleak, cold, snowy and empty as Iceland. And no crime writer portrays those elements as evocatively and scarily as Ragnar Jonasson

—— The Times

A classic crime story seen through a uniquely Icelandic lens... first rate and highly recommended

—— Lee Child, on , Snowblind

A modern take on Agatha Christie-­-style mystery, as twisty as any slalom . . .

—— Ian Rankin, on , Snowblind

Ragnar Jónasson writes with a chilling, poetic beauty - a must-read addition to the growing canon of Iceland Noir

—— Peter James

Distinctive blend of Nordic noir and golden age detective fiction...atmospheric...economical and evocative prose

—— The Guardian on Nightblind

Seductive ... an old-fashioned murder mystery with a strong central character and the fascinating background of a small Icelandic town cut off by snow. Ragnar does claustrophobia beautifully

—— Ann Cleeves

The ending hits the reader like a kick in the stomach

—— FRÉTTATIMINN ****

Jonasson's books have breathed new life into Nordic noir ...all the skilful plotting of an old-fashioned whodunit although it feels bitingly contemporary in setting and tone

—— Sunday Express

Hulda Hermannsdottir is a welcome addition to the selection of Icelandic crime fiction protagonists . . . It is almost impossible to put the book down until the last word has been read

—— Fréttablaðið ****

Out of all of Ragnar's books, this is the one I like the most . . . The book of his which reminds me most of Agatha Christie

—— Kiljan, on The Island

The threads lie in various places, the plot is well woven and the pieces in the puzzle come together well in the end. The structure is good, the main characters are believable, the story flows well, everyone is a suspect á la Agatha Christie and the solution unveils the mystery and leads the readers to the truth. But not all the truth, as some things are better left hidden

—— Morgunbladid (Icelandic newspaper)

A very good book, gripping and interesting, with all the threads carefully managed. Hopefully the author will publish as many books as possible with lead character Hulda

—— Vikan Magazine, on The Island
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