
In May 1985, 15-year-old Shep Stanley was shot and killed in his Oregon home. His killer, Daniel Robbin, was sentenced to the death penalty, and in October 2004, the Tab Mason, superintendent of the state penitentiary, received notice that the execution date had been set.
This is the basic premise of The Crying Tree by debut novelist Naseem Rakha. The book focuses on Shep’s mother, Irene, who doted on her son in life and immerses herself in grief after his death. It is only after she decides to secretly write a letter of forgiveness to Daniel that she is able to pull herself out of her despair. When Irene learns that Daniel’s execution date has been set, her feelings about the event that she had initially hoped for are complicated by the years of correspondence with him.
This novel is reminiscent of the work of Jodi Picoult, which could be a good thing or a bad thing, depending on your view of Picoult. Me, I’m indifferent to her work. I don’t mind reading it if it’s suggested for book club or the only thing available on audio at the library, but in my experience, her work is too formulaic to be satisfying. And this was also the case with Rakha’s book. I didn’t mind reading it, and I suspect that it would make a great conversation starter at a book club like mine. (We tend to focus on the issues in the books we read, rather than on the writing.) However, I couldn’t quite bring myself to care about the people in this book because they felt less like people and more like representatives of various points of view.
Rakha does do a nice job of juggling the multiple time lines present in the book. The opening chapters alternate between the days immediately after the execution date is set and the days leading up to Shep’s death. Eventually, the earlier time line catches up with the later time line, and the book follows a straightforward path to its ending. There are some secrets revealed along the way that are not altogether surprising because Rakha lays the groundwork well, but they aren’t obvious either. Unfortunately, one particular revelation turned the story into something altogether different from the exploration of the power of forgiveness that it started out to be. The element of forgiveness is still present, but the impact is lessened as the story goes on. Instead, we get to consider a completely different issue, and that issue is not handled with much depth.
The biggest problem I have with the book is with the characters. They’re just one stereotype after another. The characters who have been victimized are sensitive and thoughtful people who, perhaps, have made some mistakes that weren’t entirely in their control. The only men who are at all compassionate were beaten up by life somehow at a very early age. (Eyeroll.) Nate, Shep’s dad, is a tough, uncompromising military man who went into law enforcement and wants his son to be a tough guy like him. The members of the clergy are mean-spirited and judgmental. The women all have a little more wisdom and insight into the human condition than the men do. It’s just so darn predictable.
If you enjoy the works of Jodi Picoult or are looking for a decent book club read, you could do worse than The Crying Tree, but if you’re looking for a compelling exploration of the death penalty, you could do much, much better. Try Dead Man Walking, The Executioner’s Song, or In Cold Blood instead. Those books tell true stories, and truth is, in this case, much more powerful than fiction.
Last April, Jenny made her first post to Shelf Love. When I discovered that she was blogging, I mentioned that I’d been contemplating starting a blog myself and she was gracious enough to invite me to join in. So, one year ago today, I posted my first review,
I read Dennis Lehane’s mystery-thriller Gone, Baby, Gone back in 2004. I was on something of a Lehane kick that year: I read all four of his Kenzie-Gennaro private eye novels, plus his standalone novel Shutter Island. The books are great — well-written, solidly plotted, with a keen sense of place and an unequalled ear for the particular dialogue of Boston, where they are set. They are not ordinary mystery novels that set a problem and then solve it, restoring order to the world. Instead, they take place on the mean streets that Raymond Chandler talks about in his Simple Art of Murder, where murder, drugs, rape, and betrayal are the norm. These novels are the new noir, where all the options hurt. The protagonists, Patrick Kenzie and Angie Gennaro, are themselves Chandler’s detectives: “Down these mean streets a man must go who is not himself mean, who is neither tarnished nor afraid.”
The editing history of The Story of the Stone is a complicated one. The main author of the piece is Cao Xueqin, who claimed to have written a work of 120 chapters. However, after his death, all the versions that could be found were incomplete, made up of only 80 chapters. Two bookseller-scholars, Gao E and Cheng Weiyuan, claimed to have pieced together fragmentary manuscripts and to have bought authentic manuscripts from a street vendor to make up the last forty chapters. Debate about this last part continues even today: does any part of it belong to Cao Xueqin, and if so, how much? Is it a barefaced forgery? An edition or annotation of earlier work, as the later authors claimed?
Azadeh Moaveni was born in the United States in 1976 to Iranian parents. As part of the Iranian diaspora community in Palo Alto, California, Moaveni experienced the pleasures and pains of being part of two cultures; however, she struggled with never quite feeling that she understood her family’s country of origin:
At the famous 1914 Christmas truce in World War I, British soldier Hal Montgomery meets a German soldier named Wilhelm. Before the war, Wilhelm had lived for a time in England and became engaged to an English schoolteacher. Now, because of the war, he has been unable to get in contact with her and so he gives Hal his picture and asks him to find a way to let her know that he’s okay and that he still loves her. Hal agrees. Mackenzie Ford’s novel, Gifts of War, tells what happens when Hal and Sam, Wilhelm’s fiancée, finally meet. Hal is immediately smitten and decides that he must be part of Sam’s life, and he does everything he can to make her happy.
In Libba Bray’s A Great and Terrible Beauty, Gemma Doyle is sixteen in the year 1895. She has spent her life in India, but now that she has reached the age when most young women appear in society, she longs to go to London, and can’t understand why her mother refuses to allow it. Be careful what you wish for, Gemma: in a terrifying and tragic incident — one that seems to hint at otherworldly horrors — her mother is killed, and Gemma’s father decides to take the family to London.
You’re sitting down to dinner in a fine restaurant with a well-regarded chef who has arranged a special four-course dinner just for you. For an opening course, you’re given a selection of fine French cheeses and a lovely glass of French wine. But then the soup comes, and it’s a bowl of hot and sour soup. Even more perplexing, the main course is chicken fajitas. And dessert is cannoli. These are actually all foods that you happen to enjoy, but the meal as a whole doesn’t make much sense. Now imagine that instead of bringing each course in sequence, the waiters bring everything at once. That’s what reading Monica Ali’s In the Kitchen felt like to me. There are plenty of elements that could work in isolation, but they don’t fit together very well.