The wayfinder A novel

Adam Johnson, 1967-

Book - 2025

The Wayfinder is a novel set in the Polynesian islands of the South Pacific during the height of the Tu'i Tonga Empire. At its heart is Korero, a young girl chosen to save her people from the brink of starvation. Her quest takes her from her remote island home on a daring seafaring journey across a vast ocean empire built on power, consumption, and bloodshed. Far from a conventional swashbuckling adventure, The Wayfinder weaves a narrative about survival, self-discovery, and the history of the Tongan people. In this monumental literary work, Adam Johnson explores themes of indigeneity, ecological balance, and the resilience of humanity in the face of scarcity.

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Subjects
Genres
FIC019000
FIC014000
FIC059050
Historical fiction
Epic fiction
Novels
Fiction
Bildungsromans
Romans épiques
Romans
Published
New York : MCD, Farrar, Straus and Giroux 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Adam Johnson, 1967- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
716 pages : map ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780374619572
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Johnson, the Pulitzer-winning author of The Orphan Master's Son, unfolds a majestic saga of political unrest in the South Pacific and a girl's quest to save her people. It begins during the reign of the Tu'i Tonga Empire, sometime in the Middle Ages, with the arrival of two strangers from Tongatapu, the empire's seat, to the remote and peaceful Bird Island, where the people are about to starve from lack of resources. The unbidden travelers are two younger sons of the recently deceased Tongan king, on a mission to restore order after their treacherous uncle's rise to power. In exchange for exclusive access to food sources on a sacred royal island, Korero and her people agree to join Tonga's struggle. The sweeping plot is packed with harrowing depictions of war's moral abyss and heart-wrenching lovers' tales, most touchingly in a twisty Shakespearean development involving the princes' oldest brother and his beloved. Through it all, Johnson poignantly captures how the characters' culture is forged by their oral history tradition: "That's why stories are sacred," Korero tells a fellow islander, explaining why it's important to remember that they descended from slaves and once faced war themselves. "That's why we preserve and repeat them. That's why we're careful never to let one slip through our fingers." This is remarkable. Agent: Warren Frazier, John Hawkins & Assoc. (Oct.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

The Polynesian islands in the South Pacific are transformed by this historical epic into a region at once otherworldly and recognizable. The Pulitzer Prize--winning Johnson (The Orphan Master's Son, 2012) has established a reputation for spinning complex, colorful, and plausibly rococo yarns from civilizations remote from and mysterious to outsiders. Here, his audacious, unruly imagination roams with confidence through the island kingdom of Tonga as it undergoes societal uncertainty and the potential of war with other islands. At or near the center of this whirlwind is Kōrero, bold and insatiably curious daughter of a fisherman and a tattoo artist, whose discovery of a fishhook-shaped pendant in an ancestral graveyard signals the beginning of a grand, perilous, and transfiguring adventure that puts her, her family, and her friends on a sea voyage whose outcome could mean either salvation or oblivion for their people. The perilous odyssey is led by a figure known only as the Wayfinder, whose near-intuitive grasp of navigation by both the shifting waters and the celestial patterns of the night sky arouses in Kōrero her own aspirations of being a "way finder." Telling stories, however, is her own means of navigating through the twists and turns of her life's journey, and Johnson's multilayered narrative has the baggy, wildly divergent feel of oral storytelling, in which the intrigues of royal power politics, often facilitated through violence, are woven with tales of familial conflict, verse by royal poets, and even the occasional monologue from Kōkī, the most articulate and, it seems, resilient of the islands' many parrots. Such enchanted touches are deftly threaded into the rangy storyline by Johnson's richly lyrical prose, which is also capable of handling the social dynamics of the Tongans along with the background stories of royalty and their rivals. At times, the saga can get so discursive that it risks leaving the reader on some reef or capsized by an unexpected surge from another time. Yet somehow, you yield to the novelist's evocation of a world that, like the pendant recovered at the novel's start, feels "both ancient and startlingly new." A book stuffed with revelations while keeping many secrets. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.