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HELM by Sarah Hall Kirkus Star

HELM

by Sarah Hall

Pub Date: Nov. 4th, 2025
ISBN: 9780063439948
Publisher: Mariner Books

A chorus of voices, ranged across centuries, expresses the history of living with Helm, a weather phenomenon that blows in a remote valley in northwest England.

In Cumbria, in a valley called Eden, a fierce, tempestuous, monstrous wind blows that has impacted the world since time began. British novelist Hall, long invested in this region, gives life in her latest work to a mosaic of characters whose understanding of or connection with Helm illustrates their engagement with history, science, faith, “yarns, rituals, old beliefs…strange rustic traditions” and more. NaNay, “from the herding tribe,” sees Helm as a creature pulled from a dream; medieval astrologer Michael Lang considers it a demon; Victorian meteorologist Thomas Bodger is challenged by it as a scientific mystery to be measured; and Dr. Selima Sutar, in the modern era, has arrived to work at the Centre for Atmospheric Science observatory to study air pollution, at a moment when the weather itself, including Helm, may be at a tipping point. Hall dodges among these figures while adding more—a wayward, inventive child; an herbalist; a glider pilot—and intersperses other information about Helm: illustrations, wind speeds, alternative names, comparative phenomena. The result is an immense literary panorama, expressed at times in period language, traversing a mass of preoccupations with and perceptions of the entity that is Helm. Variously playful, irreverent, and lyrical, the assembly delivers a reading experience as diverse as its historical breadth and topical depth, sometimes following a character thread, at others evoking place or moment or comprehension in fine, descriptive, occasionally transfixing language, salted with local dialect. Impressive, absorbing, challenging, the novel sometimes overwhelms with its range and immersion, but the ambition and accomplishment are undeniable, and carry the force of a major weather event.

A monumental literary tribute to the interconnection, as old as time, of weather and humanity.