Cheri Johnsons novel Annika Rose is a marvel of invention whose always knowing prose, alternately heartbreaking and hilarious, simultaneously glimmers and cuts. A magician with character, Johnsons most artful alchemy comes in her protagonist Annika, who, if there is a meritocracy, will become as memorable a first name in literature as Holden or Huckleberry as teenagers choked and befuddled by angst, adventure, and an ever-encroaching and frightening very real world. Annikaan eighteen-year-old post-modern Laura Ingalls inhabiting a little trailer on the prairieis a breathing contradiction, both an old soul and a doe-innocent naif. Yet her battleto speak when uncomfortable truths finally outweigh convenient mythsis as ageless as both life and death.Neal Karlen, author of This Thing Called Life: Princes Odyssey On + Off the Record
Part coming-of-age story, part ode to the landscape of northern Minnesota, this is also a horror story that reflects the larger horror of adolescence, of a girls fight for integrity in the face of demolished innocence. How could we forget Annika after we meet her? Her character is seared upon my brain. She is reminiscent of other stubborn, opinionated characters who struggle in the limbo between childhood and adulthood: Huckleberry Finn, Laura Ingalls, and Scout Finch.Amanda Coplin, author of The Orchardist
"Johnson has painted a compelling portrait of a parent whose over-involvement with, and consequent dependence on, a child threatens that childs developing autonomy. Johnsons novel anatomizes this complex but familiar dynamic, showing how newly independent behaviors, even very tiny and unremarkable ones, of one member of a family can create waves of disturbance that touch all the rest."Diane Josefowicz, West Trade Review
"... Johnson generously lets the reader into Annika's inner angst, suppressed grief, and a physical desire the young woman doesn't quite know what to do with... There's a lot [ Johnson] has to say in the story about power, survival, resilience, and the moments in life we can't get back." Sheila Regan, MinnPost