Northern professor pens fantastic novel
Becky Korpi
Issue date: 9/13/07 Section: Entertainment
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During the first semester of my freshman year, I had a Good Books course with Rebecca Johns, a traveling professor at the time. I was timid and still adjusting to college life, and her snarky sense of humor in class helped quell the fear that all of my professors would be old and monotone. Unfortunately, I was a bad student. Being a little bit sick, and a whole lot of lazy for weeks at a time, resulted in a mediocre grade. Thankfully she did not hold this against me and I was able to buckle down for the rest of my NMU career, but just the same I felt I owed it to her to read her first novel, "Icebergs."
The book begins with a plane crash over a remote part of Newfoundland. It's WWII and Canadian gunner Walt Dunmore has miraculously survived the wreck. Thrown several yards from the crash site, Walt endures the bitter cold and accumulating snow to search for the other men who were on the plane. Only Walt's good friend, navigator Alister Clark, remains alive, but his shoulder injury exacerbates the seriousness of their situation. With little food or supplies, the men struggle to stay alive until help arrives.
As the days pass and the adverse Newfoundland weather rages on, Alister succumbs to his injuries and Walt tries to fight the frostbite that is slowly taking over his fingers. Back home, Walt's wife Dottie receives word that he is missing and finds support and friendship in Alister's wife. When Walt comes home and Alister doesn't, a bond forms between the two families that spans generations.
Every family has its dysfunctions, and Johns paints a relatable portrait of two families who have their share of triumphs, sorrows and secrets. What's also important is that she sculpted the families to change over time, which is also true to life as people get older and new generations are born.
Johns' storyline is well-researched; from the sensory details of the airplane to the ways of post-war farm life, it's obvious that Johns loves what she does. Johns said at a book reading last year that her grandfather's WWII plane crash sparked the idea, but it was written with such accurate description that it reads as though Johns lived through it herself.
The book begins with a plane crash over a remote part of Newfoundland. It's WWII and Canadian gunner Walt Dunmore has miraculously survived the wreck. Thrown several yards from the crash site, Walt endures the bitter cold and accumulating snow to search for the other men who were on the plane. Only Walt's good friend, navigator Alister Clark, remains alive, but his shoulder injury exacerbates the seriousness of their situation. With little food or supplies, the men struggle to stay alive until help arrives.
As the days pass and the adverse Newfoundland weather rages on, Alister succumbs to his injuries and Walt tries to fight the frostbite that is slowly taking over his fingers. Back home, Walt's wife Dottie receives word that he is missing and finds support and friendship in Alister's wife. When Walt comes home and Alister doesn't, a bond forms between the two families that spans generations.
Every family has its dysfunctions, and Johns paints a relatable portrait of two families who have their share of triumphs, sorrows and secrets. What's also important is that she sculpted the families to change over time, which is also true to life as people get older and new generations are born.
Johns' storyline is well-researched; from the sensory details of the airplane to the ways of post-war farm life, it's obvious that Johns loves what she does. Johns said at a book reading last year that her grandfather's WWII plane crash sparked the idea, but it was written with such accurate description that it reads as though Johns lived through it herself.
2008 Woodie Awards
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