Why did I love this book?
At its core, this is a fictional biography of a house in the New England woods, showing how the lives and actions of its residents echo through three centuries. It’s a book in which all the component parts are brilliant on their own, with different tones and even formats, but they still form a meaningful and narratively satisfying whole.
Published in 2023, this is one of the newest books I’ve read this year (I’ve been reading a lot, mostly older books), but it has a timeless feel. Mason’s prose is consistently beautiful, and he does an expert job of using elaborate, descriptive language without ever overwhelming the story or slowing the pace. It’s a hard book to put down, and each period of the house’s history sticks with the reader in a way that the smallest of callbacks can introduce dread or a smile. It has a clockwork quality; it all works together in a way that reads as effortless but must have involved a great deal of design.
I loved this book so much that I started going back through Mason’s other work. I've enjoyed everything I’ve read to this point, and he’s quickly become one of my favorite authors working today.
22 authors picked North Woods as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
A sweeping novel about a single house in the woods of New England, told through the lives of those who inhabit it across the centuries—“a time-spanning, genre-blurring work of storytelling magic” (The Washington Post) from the Pulitzer Prize finalist and author of The Piano Tuner and The Winter Soldier.
“With the expansiveness and immersive feeling of two-time Booker Prize nominee David Mitchell’s fiction (Cloud Atlas), the wicked creepiness of Edgar Allan Poe, and Mason’s bone-deep knowledge of and appreciation for the natural world that’s on par with that of Thoreau, North Woods fires on all cylinders.”—San Francisco Chronicle
New York…