Review
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"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... bew and heady" (Laura Freeman
Spectator)
Book Description
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One family, one day, one act of inexplicable violence -- and a lifetime spent trying to make sense of it
From the Inside Flap
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One hot August day a family drives to a ain clearing to collect birch wood. Jenny, the mother, is in
charge of lopping any small limbs off the logs with a hatchet. Wade, the her, 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 something unimaginably shocking happens, an act so extreme it will scatter the family in every different
direction.
In a story told from multiple perspectives and in razor-sharp prose, we gradually learn more about this act, and the way
its violence, love and memory reverberate through the life of every character in Idaho.
‘One of the best books I’ve read this year… Emily Ruskovich’s writing is remarkably beautiful, 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’ Claire
Fuller, author of Our Endless Numbered Days
About the Author
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Emily Ruskovich grew up in the Idaho Panhandle, on Hoodoo ain. Her fiction has appeared in Zoetrope, One
Story and the Virginia Quarterly Review. A winner of a 2015 O. Henry Award and a graduate of the Iowa Writer’s Workshop,
she now teaches creative writing at the University of Colorado, Denver. Idaho is her first novel.