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There is no arguing the instant tension Chernoff creates when Nancy Harvath's only son Danny kills his best friend Eddie Nova with a hunting bow. You're viscerally aware that from that moment, life will never be the same for these characters.
The stakes are raised even higher when the reader discovers that the parents of both of these children have been carrying on an extra-marital love affair.
And if you enjoy beautifully sculpted language and vivid descriptions of scenery--this book will attract you.
Still, what most impressed me in this novel was the depth and integrity the author found in exploring the relationship between mother and son. Many of the moments that were most poinant were quiet--away from the hype and drama of the disasterous situation--when the reader is cast deep into the consciousness of a mother who loves her child feverishly.
The book is devided into three sections, so the reader is given the opportunity to explore the story from three characters' points-of-view. The middle section is Danny's.
In this section, the writer again suceeds at submersing the reader into a character's consciousness. She is able to capture his youth intelligence. Many of the readers assumptions are turned upside-down. Danny, despite his youth--is often able to see his mother with more clarity than she sees herself.
In addition to his lamenting his deed, you experience the sad, adult-like consiousness of a child. His loyalty to his mother is exemplified by the fact that his father left them when he was two--and the stuggle he witnessed while she saved to get them out of their apartment into a home.
While the subject matter is challenging, and the situation grim--the novel is ultimately redemptive. It was a refreshing change to read a narrative about a family who sticks together through horrendous circumstances.
These folks are human. They make mistakes. Huge mistakes. But Chernoff uses sparse, pitch-perfect language and imagry to invite you into the consciousness of her characters--who if you listen--will teach you how to love.
I want everyone to read this book. People who have children. People who have parents. Mothers who're raising children on their own. Fathers who have left them behind.