A Novel
by Kendra Langford Shaw
For readers of Karen Russell, Maggie Shipstead, and Eowyn Ivey, an exuberant, highly imaginative epic about a family that settles, against all odds, in the far reaches of the Arctic and the unexpected industry that keeps them afloat for generations.
In the far reaches of the Territory of the Arctic, the Spahr family lives on a fjord accessible only by kayak and float plane, in a landscape rapidly changing as glaciers melt and sea levels rise. Their home is Jubilation House, aptly named: they are a family of free spirit and full-hearted love, descendants of the homesteaders who came to this place in a reckless scheme to civilize the Glacial Front. They live off the grid in a converted fisherman's shack, selling pickled octopus and sea crops, barely scraping by. With every day, their livelihood seems ever more precarious.
Then one of their few neighbors dredges up a centuries-old piano, a vestige from the original homesteading expedition, when every family was required to haul a six-hundred-pound instrument as a sign of mannerly society—almost none made it to their final destination. Now, this intricately carved beauty has emerged, perfectly preserved from the frigid Arctic waters, and the antique treasure becomes a priceless collectors' item. A new economic boom seizes the territory—piano hunting—and the Spahrs throw themselves into the quest with full-throated aplomb. But the costs of their possible salvation soon begin to mount.
The Pillagers' Guide to Arctic Pianos travels through generations, backward to the Spahrs' homesteader origins and forward to their descendants, eccentrics and optimists all. In a voice as buoyant and vibrant as the characters themselves, Kendra Langford Shaw gives us an unforgettable and inventive ode to the abiding love of family and pull of home, even as the home we love becomes ever more challenging to inhabit.
"[An] expansive, exciting, and all-around excellent debut... . Unpredictable and immersive... . Shaw sure-footedly traverses slippery emotional terrain and dives deep below the surface as she explores strong undercurrents of family and home. This moving, charmingly idiosyncratic novel, set upon icy terrain, is sure to melt hearts." —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
"Shaw's imagination is broad, her characters delightful, and their fates often painful but also transcendent. The Pillagers' Guide to Arctic Pianos is a lovely profile of a singular, stark place and a small, tight cast of indelibly colorful characters: a heart-wrenching, unforgettable debut…[A] compulsively readable first novel of adventure and familial love." —Shelf Awareness
"An inventive debut... . Shaw weaves memorable folkloric elements such as pet sea lions and a piano that is 18 feet tall with a resonant story of a people contending with a vanishing way of life. It's a singular tale of human perseverance." —Publishers Weekly
"The Pillagers' Guide to Arctic Pianos is a wondrously inventive, multi-generational epic, by turns playful and poignant, about the lives and objects we bequeath to the future. Shaw's brilliant debut imagines an Arctic as fantastical as anything in the Florida of Karen Russell's Swamplandia." —Peter Ho Davies, author of A Lie Someone Told You About Yourself
"Kendra Langford Shaw has created a world equal parts real and fantastical, evoking both our frontier-questing past and our ecologically uncertain future. Rowdy and boisterous, yet deeply heartfelt and thoughtful, this debut novel is a delight." —Stacey Swann, author of Olympus, Texas
This information about The Pillagers' Guide to Arctic Pianos was first featured
in "The BookBrowse Review" - BookBrowse's membership magazine, and in our weekly "Publishing This Week" newsletter. Publication information is for the USA, and (unless stated otherwise) represents the first print edition. The reviews are necessarily limited to those that were available to us ahead of publication. If you are the publisher or author and feel that they do not properly reflect the range of media opinion now available, send us a message with the mainstream reviews that you would like to see added.
Any "Author Information" displayed below reflects the author's biography at the time this particular book was published.
Kendra Langford Shaw holds an MFA from the University of Michigan, and has had fellowships at the MacDowell Colony, Yaddo, and the Vermont Studio Center. Her stories have appeared in the Antioch Review, StoryQuarterly, and The Mid-American Review. Born in Alaska, she is now a City Councilwoman in Billings, Montana, where she lives with her husband and two young children.

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