UNTAMED COAST (2026)
By Kevin C. Morris
Ballantine Books, 304 pages.
★★★★★
Available after 9/1/26
I have not yet been to Alaska, though I had an Alaskan friend when I was in grad school. She told me that it’s a hard place to live, but that once it gets in your blood, it doesn’t let go. I reckon that’s why it holds a reputation as a refuge for those who keep to themselves, value independence, and prefer to live in the rough. Still another friend spends part of her summer volunteering at Katmai National Park and tells me that words and pictures cannot do Alaska justice.
Author Kevin C. Morris takes us there in Untamed Coast, a debut novel that reads like it came from an experienced hand. It is at once, a mystery, a thriller tour through Southeast Alaska, women’s fiction (if there is such a thing!), a tale of missed signals and healing, and a wrong that took 80 years to resolve. Morris jumps us between three different time periods: 1938, the 1980s, and 2017. In the last of these, Marco(ni) Franco is along fishing from his boat Radio Flyer. Pay attention to names in this novel, as about the only thing Morris throws away are fish entrails before their cleaned bodies are tossed into the onboard freezer. Marco is one of those people who moved to Alaska to work out anguish of his wife’s death six months earlier. He’d be a recluse were it not necessary to interact with those at bars, equipment stores, and boatyards.
Morris doesn’t mechanically divide his novel into three separate periods; he trusts readers to connect the dots. The 1930s were part of the Great Depression. A man named Joe Baxter lives alone in Radioville, a communications island. His day job lies on a nearby island where miners pan for gold that will never be theirs. At the end of each day, Joe collects and tallies the gold the miners found. Security is tight and the boss’ network lets him know if anyone shows up trying to assay gold. Joe holds his job because he is scrupulously honest–until he’s not! Joe, Sam, and the oily Virgil hatch a scheme, though Joe also “banks” some gold in a unique depository.
In the 1980s we meet Anya, who’s not so sure about Alaska. She has known comfort, but she cut that possibility by marrying a loser. He didn’t seem that way at first to anyone except Anya’s parents, but he jumps from scheme to scheme and makes a hash of each. He has run up a large debt and convinces Anya to move to Alaska. Alas, he drinks heavily and violently abuses Anya. Try as she will, Anya can’t avoid being beaten–until she does!
The sections on the 1980s and 2017 allow plenty of space for Morris to expound upon the vastness of Alaska and its dangers. Radioville was abandoned in 1938. Bill Bryson once said of Australia that there were more things there than can kill you than anywhere else in the world. Alaska would probably rank a close second. Those who fish its waters generally pack a survival suit, but some never put them on because for much of the year the suits would not prevent hypothermia. We also read of abrupt killer storms; unpredictable calving glaciers; on-land carnivorous brown bears, and wolves; and winter snowfalls that can crush or asphyxiate the unprepared. Yet, when an old pal from Marco’s earlier life visits, the boat tour to which he is treated seems like an icy magic kingdom. By the time they enter a narrow passage near Radioville and Chichagot Isalnd, where miners once toiled, though, Marco’s friend is pretty sure that they are going to die in the rough seas, wind, and ice. Marco says otherwise, but he knows that there is a distinct possibility of that.
Radioville is the novel’s key. Marco once picked up an SOS on an obsolete radio band while fishing nearby, a woman calling for help. Who and where is she? No one else heard it and the Coast Guard has no reports of a distressed boat or missing person. Has the cold and grief made Marco as daft as some say he is?
What a series tales Morris weaves. And weave them he does! Remember that Morris doesn’t throw anything away. A few readers have criticized the novel’s feminist ending, but I think they failed to connect a few dots.
Rob Weir
#UntamedCoast #NetGalley
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