The Thoreau of Woodsburner is a lost soul, resigned to a career designing pencils for his father's factory while dreaming of better things. On the day of the fire, his path crosses those of three very different people, each of whom also harbors a secret dream. Oddmund Hus, a shy Norwegian farmhand, pines for the wife of his brutal employer. Eliot Calvert, a prosperous bookseller, is also a hilariously inept aspiring playwright. Caleb Dowdy preaches fire and brimstone to his followers through an opium haze. Each of their lives, like Thoreau's, will be changed forever by the fire.
"A brilliant first novel. . . . It crackles with heat and energy, as we see these characters tested by the flames, scorched by their passions, beliefs, and hopes." --New Orleans Times-Picayune
"Marvelous. . . . In this compelling homage to an iconic American writer, Pipkin may himself have just written a new American classic." --Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
"Wonderfully grandiose.... Pipkin's portrait of a nation in flux is energetic and optimistic. It's also a remarkably constructed piece of fiction--vibrant, solidly plotted and lyrically yet efficiently composed--and should be a contender for the year's important literary awards." --The Boston Globe
"Infused with moments of genuine drama, peril and suspense. Woodsburner is . . . 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." --The Dallas Morning News
"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.... The result is, well, transcendent." --The Christian Science Monitor
"Readers will be pulled inexorably toward the heat ignited by the fires of each character's story.... It is a book that will keep you up all night racing toward the last page, and then will leave you longing for more." --Jackson Free Press
"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." --San Antonio Express
"Pipkin's characters are full of convincing contradictions. . . . 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." --NPR.org, Summer Books "Best Fiction" feature
"What a terrific tale John Pipkin spins! He has taken a dramatic episode in the life of Henry David Thoreau and transformed it into a gripping and profound work of fiction." --Doris Kearns Goodwin
"Witty, bawdy, philosophical, touching, and humorous, Woodsburner is a novel I didn't want to end . . . This book is packed with interesting ideas, vital characters, and vivid writing." --Sena Jeter Naslund, author of Ahab's Wife and Four Spirits