GENNAROSE NETHERCOTT is a writer and folklorist. Her first book, The Lumberjack's Dove, was selected by Louise Gl ck as a winner of the National Poetry Series, and whether authoring novels, poems, ballads, or even fold-up paper cootie catchers, her projects are all rooted in myth-and what our stories reveal about who we are. She tours nationally and internationally performing strange tales (sometimes with puppets in tow) and composing poems-to-order for strangers on an antique typewriter with her team, the Traveling Poetry Emporium. She lives in the woodlands of Vermont, beside an old cemetery. Thistlefoot is her debut novel.
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JEWISH FICTION AWARD HONOREE
“Steeped in the ancient tropes of folk tales and animated by a
passionate belief in the vital role of storytelling, GennaRose
Nethercott’s first novel builds on her work as a folklorist and
poet. . . . Gorgeously written . . . riveting and moving.”
—Wendy Smith, The Washington Post
“At times solemn, at times playful, the [narrator] speaks to the
reader like a storyteller to a crowd gathered around a campfire. .
. . [Thistlefoot] balance[s] fun and solemnity, joy and
suffering.”
—Mallory Yu, NPR
“An excellent dip into the darker side of Eastern European tales. .
. . The author adriotly captures the challenges of adult sibling
relationships in a story of survival and memory that is pure
poetry, but never glosses over the violence of history.”
—Liz Braswell, The Wall Street Journal
“Irresistible, exuberant, and—appropriately—surefooted, GennaRose
Nethercott’s Thistlefoot brims over with earthy magic, picaresque
adventures, and eccentric and formidable characters. It’s a
fabulous, weird, gorgeous book.”
—Kelly Link
“It’s a rare treat to find a book that moves so confidently through
as many paces as GennaRose Nethercott’s Thistlefoot. . . .
Nethercott builds an incredible sense of momentum. . . . On both a
deeper and a more intimate scale than Neil Gaiman did in American
Gods, Nethercott brings a folktale to this country and sets it
loose on the road.”
—Molly Templeton, Tor
“GennaRose Nethercott is a literary trickster god who has crafted a
wonderfully imaginative, wholly enchanting novel of witness,
survival, memory, and family that reads like a fairy tale
godfathered by Neil Gaiman and Tim Burton in a wild America alive
with wonders and devils alike. Thistlefoot shimmers with magic and
mayhem and a thrilling emotional momentum. Kill the lantern; Raise
the ghost—the show is about to begin.”
—No. 1 New York Times bestselling author Libba Bray
“I have never found use for the word rollicking until I dove into
Thistlefoot. This is a genuinely rollicking adventure. It rollicks
very hard. It is skillfully stuffed with startling rollickers. Pick
up this book and prepare to be thoroughly, comprehensively,
joyfully rollicked.”
—Lemony Snicket
“Jewish and Eastern European folklore entwine in this magical,
queer-inclusive contemporary fairytale about inherited trauma and
sibling relationships. . . . A captivating read, at turns both
dark, disturbing, whimsical, and sweet.”
—Margaret Kingsbury, BuzzFeed, “The Best Science Fiction
and Fantasy Coming Out This Fall”
“[An] extraordinarily rich, layered debut novel. . . . The
novel features an outstanding, inventive narrative that uses global
folklore to examine not just the stories we tell each other but the
ones we tell ourselves. . . . A quirky and heartbreaking
journey through time and space that not only engrosses readers but
reminds them what it means to be part of a story—particularly one
as important as is shared here.”
—Patricia S. Gormley, Washington Independent Review of Books
“A clever update of the [Baba Yaga] tale we know and love, and a
story of family, heritage, magic steeped in Slavic traditions—and
POV chapters from the house itself. Nothing could make me (and
hopefully you, also) happier.”
—Christina Orlando, Tor
“[A] highly original story that wrestles with complex
themes.”
—Lacy Baugher Milas, Paste, “The Best New Fantasy Books of
September 2022”
“A powerful, moving look at Jewish history. . . . The concluding
scenes are awe inspiring and will move readers to tears.”
—Rabbi Rachel Esserman, The Reporter
“[A] charming novel that mixes Jewish history and folklore with a
story set on a journey across today’s America.”
—San Francisco Bay Times
“Nethercott’s rich reimagining of the Baba Yaga myth is accented by
Jewish folktales and combines gorgeous imagery and delicate family
dynamics with a good-versus-evil struggle that is generations in
the making. . . . This imaginative, lyrical Slavic fantasy
will captivate fans of Naomi Novik’s Spinning Silver or Katherine
Arden’s The Bear and the Nightingale.”
—Jaclyn Fulwood, Shelf Awareness (starred review)
“This modern fairy tale steeped in Eastern European folklore will
enchant readers looking for something fresh and different.
Nethercott’s family drama is a wonderful and memorable read.”
—Debutiful
“Both a folklorist and a poet whose kaleidoscopically gorgeous The
Lumberjack’s Dove was chosen by Louise Glück for the National
Poetry series, Nethercott brings strong gifts to bear on this
retelling of Slavic folktales. . . . at once a modern
folktale, a road trip–like saga, and a chiller featuring ghosts,
golems, and flesh-eating witches.”
—Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal, “Top Fall Debut Novels”
“It’s an exquisite and rare literary skillset that can produce a
book so epic and adventurous in scope, yet so poetic and intimate
at the sentence level. Thistlefoot isn’t just reimagined
folklore—what GennaRose Nethercott has managed to do with this
beautiful, haunting novel is capture so many of the disparate
meanings of inheritance: the joy, heartbreak and ever-moving nature
of things passed down through blood and time. This is a book to be
lived in, a wild and stunning ride.”
—Omar El Akkad, author of What Strange Paradise
“Like Neil Gaiman and Susanna Clarke, GennaRose Nethercott
understands the precise alchemy of darkness and whimsy that
comprise all the best fairytales. Thistlefoot is a near-perfect
bedtime story for grown-ups.”
—Shaun Hamill, author of A Cosmology of Monsters
“The house of fiction might have a million windows, but GennaRose
Nethercott gives it legs. She is half yente, half soothsayer, her
sentences bubbling over with magic and commiseration. Thistlefoot
is a brave bubbe-meise and a wily campfire tale, told with
compassion, hope, and endless heart.”
—Hilary Leichter, author of Temporary
“Nethercott converts painful remembrance itself into
a fierce, lyrical fable. . . . Wondrous details and
plot twists generate surprise throughout. . .
. Nethercott’s prose is passionate and unputdownable, with
the dramatic visual strength of a Tim Burton film.”
—Sharon Elswit, Jewish Book Council’s Paper Brigade Daily
“A vibrant, shape-shifting collage of family saga, Jewish folklore
and magical adventure, GennaRose Nethercott’s debut novel,
Thistlefoot, is, like its namesake, weird and wonderful. . .
. Nethercott’s gorgeous writing continually surprises and
delights. . . . Thistlefoot is a triumph.”
—Chris Pickens, BookPage (starred review)
“Gorgeously written. . . . This novel contains delights on
every page. The author displays a capacious imagination, providing
an entertaining, colorful read while grappling with subjects of
utmost importance to today’s turbulent world. This book blooms
from a fairy tale to a panoptic story that defies space and time,
brimming with creativity, wisdom, and love.”
—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“Nethercott’s quiet, lyrical, yet potent prose . . . breathes life
into this stirring, multigenerational fairy tale. . . . This fable
about fables reminds us of the staying power of stories.”
—Biz Hyzy, Booklist (starred review)
“Replete with beautiful metaphors and lyrical prose, poet and
folklorist Nethercott’s debut novel deploys her poetic
storytelling powers to spotlight the struggle against oppression.
This modern-day fairy tale will ignite greater understanding of an
individual’s ability to incite change with the stories they
tell.”
—K.L. Romo, Library Journal (starred review)
“A heartbreaking reinterpretation of the myth of Baba Yaga. .
. . Fans of thorny, contemporary retellings of folklore will
appreciate Nethercott’s take on the theme of inherited trauma.”
—Publishers Weekly
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