Steller's Orchid
By (Author) Thomas McGuire
Red Hen Press
Boreal Books
31st March 2020
United States
General
Fiction
Crime and mystery fiction
813.6
Paperback
200
Width 139mm, Height 215mm, Spine 18mm
318g
In 1924, John Lars Nelson travels to the Shumagin Islands in the Gulf of Alaska. He tells people he is doing a botanical survey, but the real goal of his quest is a mysterious orchid described by a naturalist in 1741 and never again seen. During his journey, John Lars hitches a ride on a schooner whose bootlegger captain has a hidden past. John Lars also meets a young Aleut woman, Natasha Christiansen. She becomes his guide and leads him to question the validity of everything he thought he knew. Together, they reach Nagai Island where the search for the orchid comes to a violent conclusion.
"I learned more about life in the Aleutians 100 years agofrom Tom McGuire's page turnerStellers Orchidthan I did from a decade living in Alaska. In the course of drawing us in to the quest of John Lars, a young orchid seeker, McGuire subtly reveals how we arrived at the Alaska of today.. This adventurous, unforgettably original and so human saga has more than a few moments of erudite ad poetic narrative. Stellers Orchidteaches us how and why commoditized plants have been transported around the world to comprise the modern agricultural landscape. McGuires narrative culminatesin an exciting climax set in one of the most remote spots on the planet, a fitting end to a book that is as much about the nature of life and love as orchid hunting and ambition."Doug Fine, authorFarewell, My Subaru and Too High to Fail
"Steller's Orchid most definitely deserves a spot among the best of contemporary Alaska fiction. Its a perfect example of literature that can entertain while also teaching about place, history and the human heart."Nancy Lord of Anchorage Daily News
Chilkat Valley News
Its 1924, and Yale botany student John Lars Nelson embarks on the adventure of a lifetime to Alaskas remote Shumagin Islands in search of a brilliant red orchid that may or may not exist. Little does he realize that finding a flower in the arctic would be a matter of life and death.
In Nelson, Tom McGuire has created a smart, capable, and endearing narrator for this old-fashioned adventure, mystery, and coming of age novel.
Stellers Orchid is authentically Alaskan and refreshingly original. It belongs on the shelf with Eowyn Iveys To the Bright Edge of the World and Lynn Schoolers Walking Home.
I just finished Stellers Orchid, and I enjoyed it so much that Id like to read it again.
Heather Lende
Tom McGuire came to Alaska with two college friends. Fifty years later he still hasnt found reason to leave. He has worked as a salmon fisherman, carpenter, and North Slope oilfield worker. He and his wife haveraised four children in a house they built on the banks of the Chilkoot River. Grizzly bears are frequent visitors. Tom has also paddled thousands of miles down (and up) northern rivers. He has published a book 99 Days on the Yukon,that describes a summerlong trip with legendary canoeist Charlie Wolf.