01/15/2026 | News release | Distributed by Public on 01/15/2026 15:17
Mitch Wieland, professor of creative writing and co-founder of the Boise State MFA creative writing program, received a prestigious Kirkus starred review for his forthcoming novel, "The Ghosts of Okuma."
"Whether depicting the memories of a mother and son in California or staging an eerie conclusion set against a 'rain-drenched radioactive forest,' Wieland finds something fascinating and engrossing in every twist of the tale," the reviewer writes. "A strange, beautiful, and unexpected exploration of the fallout of family tragedy."
Kirkus Reviews gives a star to only 10% of the 8,000-10,000 books reviewed each year by the magazine. "One of the most coveted designations in the book industry, the Kirkus Star marks books of exceptional merit," the Kirkus website notes.
Wieland's novel centers on two teenagers, both marked by tragedy and loss, who form an unlikely friendship in Tokyo, Japan.
The novel received much advanced praise from writers, including Anthony Doerr, best-selling author of "All the Light We Cannot See" and winner of the Pulitzer Prize. "By turns comic and tragic, Mitch Wieland's 'The Ghosts of Okuma' is a sharply-written and brilliantly-paced novel that manages to become both a satisfying love story and a devastating look at the lives of one family shattered by suicide and another displaced by the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster," Doerr wrote. "It's so funny, charming, and infused with tenderness that it's a pure pleasure to read […]"