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Cold: A Novel
 
 
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Cold: A Novel [Paperback]

John Smolens (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 23, 2003
In the frozen reaches of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, fierce winter storms can hit without notice. In the white opacity of one such blizzard, Norman Haas simply walks away from his prison work detail without detection.

After agonizing days of blistering cold, Norman finds himself at the farmhouse of a lonely middle-aged woman who gives him temporary shelter while keeping him at a comfortable distance with her late husband’s shotgun. When she tries to turn him in, he escapes again. Thus begins a riveting story of Norman’s journey back to his past, back to the woman he loved who betrayed him, back to the brother who helped put him away, and back to a dangerous web of family allegiances, deceptions, and intrigue.

On Norman’s trail is Del Maki, the hard-working sheriff of Yellow Dog Township, a fork in the road on the way to Canada. Cold takes us deep into an intricate, fascinating tale, where love, greed, and the promise of a last chance compel six people toward a chilling and inevitable reckoning.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

John Smolens's matter-of-fact narrative style pairs ideally with this gritty yarn about a convict who, after fleeing a work detail in Michigan's Upper Peninsula, sets off through a snowstorm to reclaim the life he'd enjoyed before his duplicitous family sent him to prison. Here's an example of Smolens's style from early on in Cold, when escapee Norman Haas is involved in a trucking accident. Rather than save the trapped driver from his rig's explosion, Norman steals a van from a stranger who has stopped to help them both. "As he pushed in the clutch and shifted into first gear," Smolens writes,
he realized there was a familiar smell in the warm van. The ashtray was full of rolls of Certs; he picked up one and began peeling back the paper. In the rearview mirror he could see the burning truck. The flames now rose high above the cab, and thick black smoke blew into the trees alongside the road. Norman put a Certs in his mouth. The taste reminded him of inside, where he'd sucked on Certs all day long. Wintergreen.
Norman never achieves much more dimension than that. He exists primarily as a catalyst, forcing this book's other more intricately drawn characters to reveal their own pain, mendacity, or longing. These include characters like his ex- fiancée, Noel, who saw Norman's incarceration as just revenge for his abuse; she went on to marry his malingering brother, but now intends to run away with Norman to Canada. Or like Del Maki, the small-town sheriff whose dogged pursuit of the escapee is entwined with his growing appreciation for a widowed sculptor who'd tried to convince Norman to turn himself in. As these players, along with Noel's hunter father and his mysterious Asian business partner, converge at a remote cabin, they incite a desperate, violent clash that exposes both the deception at the root of Norman's conviction and an ugly conspiracy to profit from wildlife destruction. Cold is fiction to chill the soul--too revealing of human selfishness to be easily read, too well-written to be easily put down. --J. Kingston Pierce --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

Set in Michigan's cold, harsh Upper Peninsula, this third novel by Smolens (Angel's Head, etc.) uses its frigid backdrop as the perfect setting for an astute examination of six lives wrecked by fate, betrayal and tragedy. Norman Haas, an inmate at a nearby prison, turns up nearly frozen and starved on the isolated property of Liesl Tiomenen, a widow whose life was derailed by the deaths of her husband and daughter in a car crash. Liesl has a gun, and she decides to escort Norman into town on foot, since the snow is too deep for driving. When she falls and can't get up again, Norman leaves her alone in the snow. Though he was jailed for assaulting his older outlaw brother, Warren, and pill-popping girlfriend, Noel, who were cheating on him together, Norman still loves Noel and is determined to return and set things straight. Heading home through a relentless blizzard, he picks up Noel and their three-year-old daughter, Lorraine, and together the three hole up in a lodge deep in the snowy woods. Meanwhile, Liesl has been rescued; recovering, she joins forces with dogged local sheriff Del Maki to find Norman, though both suspect he got a raw deal from the law. When all of the major players including treacherous Warren and Noel's sinister father come together for the final confrontation, nothing prepares the reader for the startling chain of events that lead to a violent, shattering ending. Smolens's skill in rendering scenes of stunning brutality and uncommon tenderness, his crisp dialogue, vigorous writing style and keen descriptive powers all make this a first-rate thriller. Agent, Noah Lukeman. (Sept.)Forecast: A rave blurb from Jim Harrison suggests the cut-above quality of this excellent thriller. Smolens's previous novels were critically acclaimed, and this one should help build his readership.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Three Rivers Press (September 23, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1400050871
  • ISBN-13: 978-1400050871
  • Product Dimensions: 5.2 x 0.6 x 8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #884,172 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

John Smolens's new novel, THE SCHOOLMASTER'S DAUGHTER, which is set in Boston during the first year of the American Revolution, will be published September 12, 2011, by Pegasus Books, New York.

ENDORSEMENTS for THE SCHOOLMASTER'S DAUGHTER

"In this magnificently researched and absorbing historical novel, John Smolens brings to intimate life the first days of the American Revolution as the civil war it actually was, in and around a Boston at once recognizable and yet still thrillingly close to wild nature, with a swampy waterfront, three cave pocked hills above it, and cows everywhere, not only on the Commons. Smolens gives us a rich sense, not only of how the fight divided private families, but also of what surprising alignments it bred inside Colonial society, from its selectmen, through its watermen and their families, down to its abundant prostitutes. This is a fresh take on the world of Paul Revere, thronged with strong women."

--Jaimy Gordon, author of LORD OF MISRULE, winner of the National Book Award 2010.


"John Smolens tells the fictional story of the outbreak of the revolutionary war with such fine detail and verve it seems he was there. You won't forget the lovely Abigail Lovell who helped her two brothers outmaneuver the Brits with a combination of pluck, smarts, and sexual wiles. This is a book for anyone who likes their history served up with literary flair, and deep empathy for a myriad of characters-- hot-blooded story-telling at its finest."

--Doug Stanton, author of HORSE SOLDIERS and IN HARM'S WAY

Biography

John Smolens has published six novels, The Anarchist, Cold, The Invisible World, Fire Point, Angel's Head, and Winter by Degrees; and one collection of short stories, My One and Only Bomb Shelter. His new book, entitled The Anarchist, a historical novel that depicts the William McKinley's assassination, will be published December 2009 by Three Rivers Press, a division of Random House. His short stories and essays have been in various magazines and newspapers, including Redbook, Yankee, the Massachusetts Review, the Virginia Quarterly Review, the Los Angeles Times, and the Boston Globe. His work has been published in the United Kingdom, and translations have appeared in the Netherlands, Italy, Greece, and Turkey. Educated at Boston College, the University of New Hampshire, and the University of Iowa, he is a professor of English Northern Michigan University and lives in Marquette, Michigan. More information and sample chapters are available at johnsmolens.com.


The Anarchist, by John Smolens
Publication Date: December 8, 2009
Three Rivers Press, a division of Random House

Endorsements

"John Smolens has written a historical novel with the quick-beating heart of a thriller. Written in crisp, cinematic prose, The Anarchist has echoes of the best noir, while at the same time invoking a terrifyingly empathetic portrait of the young assassin Leon Czolgosz, who, in Smolens hands, has a kind of Dostoyevskian complexity. Before reading this book, the McKinley assassination existed in my mind as only a dry fact. The Anarchist has brought these events to rich, bloody, teeming life. " --Dan Chaon, author of Await Your Reply

"Fiction so shapely and finely wrought: dark history inexorably bound to repeat itself -- The Anarchist is another gem from a master of the storyteller's arts." - National Book Award finalist Thomas Lynch, author of The Undertaking

"If you have ever been fascinated by the name and deed of one Leon Czolgosz, John Smolens's The Anarchist will be a good friend to you. If you have never heard of the name and deed of one Leon Czolgosz, John Smolens's The Anarchist will likely be a revelation. With his portrait of a bygone America both out for blood and at its own throat, Smolens has written an intelligent, often troubling warning disguised as a first-rate thriller, as though Sinclair Lewis has fused with Alan Furst." --Tom Bissell (Father of All Things, God Lives in St. Petersburg, and Chasing the Sea)


From the Random House catalogue:

The Anarchist is a richly detailed, fast-paced historical thriller based on the true story of one man's delusional, murderous dream that ushered in America's troubled twentieth century.

On a hot afternoon in September 1901, a young, dreamy-eyed anarchist, Leon Czolgosz, who has been stalking President William McKinley during his visit to the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, New York, waits in line to meet the president, his right hand wrapped in a handkerchief and held across his chest as though it were in a sling. But the handkerchief conceals a .32 caliber revolver, and as the president greets him, Czolgosz fires two shots, shouting "I done my duty!" while security guards wrestle him to the floor.
As the president struggles to survive, the nation plummets into fear and anger.

When the president dies a week later, Teddy Roosevelt is sworn into office in Buffalo while rioting mobs attempt to lynch McKinley's assassin, and across the country anarchists such as the notorious Emma Goldman are being tracked down and arrested. While Pinkerton detectives search for Czolgosz's conspirators, another young man, Moses Hyde, an orphan who has labored for years on Erie Canal towboats, and who is driven by his love for Motka Ascher, a beautiful Russian immigrant imprisoned in the attic of Big Maud's whorehouse, infiltrates an anarchist group as it sets in motion a deadly scheme designed to push the country into a state of anarchy.

The Anarchist brilliantly renders a haunting and belligerent twentieth century landscape teeming with immigrants, corrupt politicians, con artists, prostitutes, and "canawlers," an America where every allegiance is questioned, and every hope and aspiration comes at a price.


Excerpts from Book Reviews:

Fire Point (2004)

Publications & Review Excerpts

* United States: Shaye Areheart Books/Random House, New York, August 2004.
* United Kingdom: Hodder & Stoughton, Ltd., London, August 2004.
* Greece (Greek translation): Electra Publishing, Athens, forthcoming 2006.

* Reviewed in (partial list): Publishers' Weekly, Booklist, Kirkus Reviews, Denver Post, Detroit Free Press, Baltimore Sun, Wichita Weekly, Houghton Daily Gazette, The Independent on Sunday (UK), Yorkshire Gazette & Herald (UK).

* Detroit Free Press selection as the best book written by a Michigan author in 2004.
* Finalist for the Great Lakes Booksellers Award, 2004.

Innocent lovers are subjected to an onslaught of jealousy and hostility on Michigan's remote Upper Peninsula in a sensitively observed, mesmerizing fourth novel that builds in fury as inexorably and stunningly as a Lake Superior storm.
--Publishers' Weekly (starred review)

Smolens is especially deft at capturing the rhythms of small-town life and the complexity of his "ordinary" people. Incisive portraits of town denizens add texture.
--Kirkus

Smolens proves especially adept at illustrating the tenuous alliances and small fissures that form between townies when the tourists have all gone home. In a quiet, assured fashion, he sets up a series of inevitable confrontations that don't usually turn out the way one would expect--just like in real life. Fans of Tim O'Brien's In the Lake of the Woods will find much to like here. -Booklist

Fire Point is a good, suspenseful read with the kind of lean writing that many better-selling writers would have to sell their souls to achieve. -Detroit Free Press

In January 2005 the Detroit Free Press selected Fire Point as the best book by a Michigan Author in 2004.

Hemingway set some of his best tales in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, as has Jim Harrison. In his latest novel, John Smolens also takes advantage of the Lake Superior area to great effect....Smolens has done a superlative job of rendering a place and its people realistically. He has crafted a thriller that is as literate and insightful into human nature as any novel out this year. -Denver Post

In the hands of others, this story line would feel trite and overused, but not in Smolens' hands. Hannah LeClaire, new love Martin Reed, and old flame Sean Colby are victims of past mistakes, beholden to choices they had no power to make, and amazingly, redeemed in surprising and unexpected ways. --Baltimore Sun

Smolens has made a Hamlet's Denmark out of Hannah's Whitefish Harbor, Michigan - Upper Peninsula. --Wichita Eagle

Endorsements

Fire Point put my teeth on edge from the first page and kept them there until I finished. Smolens is a fine writer with a profound knowledge of human behavior gone awry.
--Jim Harrison, author of Legends of the Fall


The Invisible World (2002)

Publications & Review Excerpts

* United States: Shaye Areheart Books/Random House, New York, October 2002.
* United Kingdom: Hodder & Stoughton, Ltd., London, November 2002.
* Greece: Electra Publishing, Athens, May 2004.

* Reviewed in (partial list): The New York Times, Publishers' Weekly, the Associated Press, the Boston Globe, Dublin Times (Ireland), the Baltimore Sun, Ann Arbor News, Dallas Star, Booklist, Library Journal; To Vima, Ta Nea, The Athens Voice, Aggelioforos (Greece).


Smolens's sharp views of places like Charlestown and Salem avoid the usual hometown sentimentality, making a nice contrast with the mournful lyric voice he uses for Sam's recollections of his miserable family life. --Marilyn Stasio, The New York Times

The novel contains many allusions to the various conspiracy theories surrounding the Kennedy assassination, but thankfully, it never comes across as trying to solve the mystery. It is far more a well-told tale about the way that obsessions - with theories, with fathers, with failures - tend to take over lives, sometimes several lives at once, and the manner in which the shadows of momentous events only seem to lengthen over time, cloaking an ever larger crowd in their darkness. --Dan Fesperman, The Baltimore Sun and The Chicago Tribune

While there are plenty of moments of high suspense along the way - a few close shaves, a disappearance, a killing or two - it is the slower moments that are more rewarding, often graced with pitch-perfect observations. --The Associated Press

A poignant and literate thriller which shows that a news story that reaches its 40th birthday this year still has the power to haunt. --The Guardian, London

The Invisible World is more than a first-rate political thriller. It's an absorbing tale of alienation and loss, and the ramifications of a rootless, troubled family. Adams, though nearly 50 years old, is a man without place, despite his affection for his neighborhood, his memories of the hockey games at the old Garden, and, most dear and troubling to him, his childhood in Salem, when his promising sister fell prey to drugs and local lore, and his mother was compelled to live a life not of her choosing. And then there's his father, whom he's written about but doesn't really know. Thus, the shadows Adams crosses on the streets of Boston and Salem compete with the dark places in his regret-plagued mind, and he is never at ease. Smolens manages all this without surrendering to sentimentality or losing his grip on his mystery. It's an achievement, for "The Invisible World" enriches us, and subtly provokes us, while providing its chills and thrills.
--Jim Fusilli, The Boston Globe


Cold (2001)

Publications & Review Excerpts

* United States: Shaye Areheart Books/Random House, New York, September 2001.
* U. S. Paperback edition: Three Rivers Press/Random House, New York, October, 2003.
* United Kingdom: Hodder & Stoughton, Ltd., London, October 2001.
* Holland (Dutch translation: Koud Spoor): House of Books/EMI, 2002.
* Italy (Italian translation: Freddo): Hobby & Work, Milan, 2003.
* Turkey (Turkish translation: Soguk): Plan B, Istanbul, 2003.
* United Kingdom (Large print edition): F. A. Thorpe, Leicestershire, 2003.
* Greece (Greek translation): Electra Publishing, Athens, 2005.
* Reviewed in (partial list): Publishers' Weekly, Kirkus Reviews, Library Journal, Booklist, London Sunday Express (UK), Chicago Tribune, Baltimore Sun.
* Selections: Detroit Free Press Book Club selection, November 2003; Amazon.com Editors' Choice selection; finalist for Great Lakes Book Award; nominated for Pulitzer Prize in Fiction by Shaye Areheart Books.

Smolens's skill in rendering scenes of stunning brutality and uncommon tenderness, his crisp dialogue, vigorous writing style and keen descriptive powers all make this a first-rate thriller. --Publishers Weekly

In prose that is as pure and clear as the cold it evokes, Smolens probes intimate relationships and reveals nefarious schemes in a gripping story. Absolutely compelling; for all fiction collections. -- Library Journal
Those who read suspense novels for their projection of justice and resolution will find a winner here in this well-plotted and well-written tale fueled by a sense of impending disaster. --Booklist

A mesmerizing danse macabre, one that welds the drama of family treachery to an unforgiving landscape...Imagine James M. Cain rewriting the script of the film Fargo and you get close to the novel's palpable mixture of bleak wilderness and blood-hot passion. Hot stuff, stripped bare with ice and fire. -- The London Sunday Express

Endorsements

"John Smolens is that rare and gifted writer who can capture both our exterior and interior worlds with equal dexterity, grace, and power. COLD is a novel so riveting you will absolutely not be able to put it down, and these characters will stay with you long after turning the last page."
--Andre Dubus III, author of House of Sand and Fog


"Cold is a finely crafted, wild yarn set in the great north. John Smolens gives us a suspenseful tale in a style somewhere between Jack London and Raymond Chandler. A fine read." --Jim Harrison, author of Legends of the Fall




Angel's Head (1994)

"Smolens' prose ... is an understated marvel."
-- Publisher's Weekly

Winter by Degrees (1987)

"What holds our attention is the rich atmosphere, the chill desolation of a shore town in midwinter. John Smolens knows his territory, social as well as geographical and proves it in his first novel." --Boston Sunday Globe

"A promising debut." --Chicago Tribune
"...delivers gritty dialogue and earthy atmosphere." --Kirkus
"Rich in detail....Captures the sense of gloom that hangs over seaside communities in the winter as if a tragedy is just around every corner." --Cape Cod Chronicle


Public Appearances

John Smolens has given numerous public readings, talks, workshops, and book signings at book stores, conferences, conventions, libraries, and schools. Many of these events took place in the Upper Midwest and Massachusetts in conjunction with the publication of his books. A sampling includes: the BookExpo of America Convention; the University of Iowa, Central College, Iowa; Creighton University, Omaha; Wichita State University, Kansas; Finlandia College; the Ann Arbor Authors' Festival; the Romeo Michigan Public Library, the Dow Memorial Public Library, Midland, MI; Biblioteca Comunale "Mozzi Borgetti," Macerata, Italy; Libreria Feltrinelli Interantional, Firenze; appearances in Istanbul, Turkey, arranged by Plan B, publisher of Soguk (Cold). In conjunction with many of these events he has given numerous radio, newspaper, and on-line interviews.

For upcoming readings and events, please go to johnsmolens.com






 

Customer Reviews

15 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (15 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Enjoyable read, May 18, 2002
By 
Wow. The reviews before mine were pretty harsh. They really picked this book apart. Seems they took personal offense that the book was set in the UP, and they weren't happy with the author's take on their area and their lives. Born and raised in Chicago, I enjoyed this book. Maybe that's the difference. I didn't read it and pick every little thing apart. The first few pages really got my attention, and the story was slow moving, but gradually built to a satisfying conclusion. I disagree that the characters were shallow or underdeveloped. I thought both Warren and Norman were quite well developed, just not very likable. But that's what made the story interesting! I say pick up a used copy and check it out for yourself. Give it a chance.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Its warm coat time, March 16, 2003
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Eric Marmont (Gilbert, AZ USA) - See all my reviews
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Cold is a fine book, that should be enjoyed for what it is, a phychological/mystery. Set in the rugged Upper Pennisula of Michigan in the dead of winter, the story unfolds in such a riveting manner that you will have a very hard time in putting it down. The story and the cold will stay with you for awhile after you finish reading it.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Better than Siberia, November 25, 2002
John Smolens, in his novel, "Cold," captures the feel, the smell,and and the atmophere of a frigid, nothern climate. His woods and the people who inhabit them are so real that they move off the pages. I couldn't put this book down and read it until three in the morning.
"Cold" is as good as "Fargo"and "Dr. Zhivago." I hope that this book is made into a movie, because the shivers are better than my 1977 trip to Siberia!
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Liesl Tiomenen saw the man from her kitchen window. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Land Cruiser, North Eicher, Del Maki, Lake Superior, Great Room, Yellow Dog Township, Raymond Yates, North Ficher, Blue Antler, Green Coat, Sault Ste, Upper Peninsula
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