Supersonic: A Novel
By (Author) Thomas Kohnstamm
Counterpoint
Counterpoint
25th March 2025
United States
General
Fiction
813.6
Hardback
400
Width 145mm, Height 219mm
567g
"Masterfully rendered and mercilessly readable. Kohnstamm populates these pages with insight, hilarity, emotion, and unforgettable characters. Supersonic is a novel with so much narrative propulsion that it manages to live up to its name." -Jonathan Evison, author of Small World and Lawn Boy "Masterfully rendered and mercilessly readable. Kohnstamm populates these pages with insight, hilarity, emotion, and unforgettable characters. Supersonic is a novel with so much narrative propulsion that it manages to live up to its name." -Jonathan Evison, author of Small World and Lawn Boy When PTA president Sami Hasegawa-Stalworth petitions to rename a Seattle elementary school after her late grandmother, she ignites a battle over the school's future and the history of its surrounding neighborhood. Supersonic launches readers into a kaleidoscopic tale of the generations of interrelated families who breathed life into that small, hilltop community. The story cuts in time from the arrival of white settlers' ships to the last indigenous landowner fighting to hold on to scraps of his ancestral home and back to the school's PTA auction. It interweaves an opioid-addicted nineteenth-century con man-cum-civic booster, a disgraced Navy seaman building an airplane that travels faster than sound, a stay-at-home dad hustling to open the city's first legal weed shop and Sami's grandmother, a Japanese internment survivor who founded the school's once-celebrated music program. The novel traces their false starts, triumphs, and heartbreaks through the booms and busts of the Yukon gold rush, the jet age, Big Tech, and beyond. By exploring the converging and often clashing personalities that make up the dynamic soul of a place, Supersonic illuminates themes of identity, displacement, destruction, and reinvention that give rise to all great American cities.
THOMAS KOHNSTAMM is the author of the novel Lake City and the memoir Do Travel Writers Go to Hell He was born and raised in Seattle and still lives in the same house he grew up in-now with his wife and two children. A freelance writer for over twenty years, he's a Sundance Fellow and runs his own multimedia content studio.