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Under the Mercy Trees
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September 2020: Psychological > Under the Mercy Trees / Heather Newton - 3.5***

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Book Concierge (tessabookconcierge) | 8412 comments Under the Mercy Trees by Heather Newton
Under the Mercy Trees – Heather Newton
3.5***

From the book jacket: Thirty years ago, Martin Owenby came to New York City with dreams of becoming a writer. Now his existence revolves around cheap Scotch and weekend flings with equally damaged men. When he learns that his older brother, Leon, has gone missing, he must return to the Owenby farm in Solace Fork, North Carolina, to assist in the search. But that means facing a past filled with regrets, the family that never understood him, the girl whose heart he broke, and the best friend who has faithfully kept the home fires burning.

My reactions:
Oh, what a tangled web we weave… I’m not sure what I was thinking, even from reading the book jacket, but this was quite a bit darker than I expected. There are so many things going on, so many “secrets” (most of which are known to family and even the rest of the residents of this small town), so many betrayals. We have people consumed by alcohol (and/or drugs), mean-spirited control freaks, unfaithful spouses, guilty consciences, mental (and physical) illness and abject loneliness that comes with keeping all that bottled up. I’m exhausted by the effort required by these characters to hide so much and still co-exist in such tight quarters.

Martin is such a broken man, whose early promise has never been realized. I cannot help but think of the analogy of a basket of crabs … you don’t need a cover because if any one of the crabs tries to crawl out, the others will just drag it back into the basket. In this case it is Martin’s family situation, his loyalty to his mother, his guilt for leaving her, his shame for being who he is, a gay man in a time and place that will not tolerate such “aberration and sin.” He is so broken that he cannot even accept the love of his two loyal friends from high school – Liza and Hodge – who still love him for who he is despite his efforts to run from them.

And Martin’s sister, Ivy, is a marvelous character. Gifted (or cursed) with an ability to see and communicate with ghosts, she’s discounted by the townspeople and her family as insane and/or stupid. She is virtually invisible, mostly because no one wants to see her. As a result she’s a great observer and keeper of secrets.

As for the mystery of Martin’s missing older brother … Newton surprised me with several of the plot twists.

This is her only novel. I wish there were more for me to read.



LINK to my review


message 2: by NancyJ (new)

NancyJ (nancyjjj) | 11062 comments Great review. This sounds dark and meaty. I'll have to remember the basket of crabs analogy. The character sounds a little like the mc in Heart's Invisible Furies?


Book Concierge (tessabookconcierge) | 8412 comments NancyJ wrote: "Great review. This sounds dark and meaty. I'll have to remember the basket of crabs analogy. The character sounds a little like the mc in Heart's Invisible Furies?"

I haven't read HIF so can't comment on any similarities between the characters.


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