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The Hanging Tree: A Starvation Lake Mystery (Starvation Lake Mysteries)
 
 
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The Hanging Tree: A Starvation Lake Mystery (Starvation Lake Mysteries) [Paperback]

Bryan Gruley (Author)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (42 customer reviews)

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Book Description

August 3, 2010 Starvation Lake Mysteries
WHEN GRACIE McBRIDE, the wild girl who had left town eighteen years earlier, is found dead in an apparent suicide shortly after her homecoming, it sends shock waves through her native Starvation Lake. Gus Carpenter, executive editor of the Pine County Pilot, sets out to solve the mystery with the help of his old flame and now girlfriend, Pine County sheriff deputy Darlene Esper. As Gus and Darlene investigate, they can’t help but question if Gracie’s troubled life really ended in suicide or if the suspicious crime-scene evidence adds up to murder.

But in such a small town it’s impossible to be an impartial investigator—Gracie was Gus’s second cousin; Darlene’s best friend; and the lover of Gus’s oldest pal, Soupy Campbell. Yet with all the bad blood between Gus and Gracie over the years, Gus is easily distracted by other problems. His employer is trying to push him out, the locals are annoyed that his stories have halted construction on a new hockey rink, and Darlene’s estranged husband has returned to reclaim his wife.

When Gus tries to retrace Gracie’s steps to discover what happened to her in the eighteen years she was away from Starvation Lake, he’s forced to return to Detroit, the scene of his humiliating past. And though he’s determined to find out what drove Gracie back home, Gus is unprepared for the terrible secrets he uncovers.

The second book in Bryan Gruley’s irresistible Starvation Lake series, The Hanging Tree is a compelling story about family and friendship, sex and violence, and the failure of love to make everything right.

 


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The Hanging Tree: A Starvation Lake Mystery (Starvation Lake Mysteries) + Starvation Lake: A Mystery + A Cold Day in Paradise (Alex McKnight Mysteries)
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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Gruley, Chicago bureau chief of the Wall Street Journal and Edgar Award nominee for his first novel, Starvation Lake (2009), returns to Starvation, a Michigan resort town whose best days are fading in the rear-view mirror. The detective is, again, Gus Carpenter, himself faded from his glory days as a reporter with the Detroit Times. Gus is back where he started but, worse, working on a small-town newspaper with a kid boss who sneers at traditional journalism. The action is triggered by a hanging—an apparent suicide by a woman who left Starvation 20 years earlier, was back in town for six months, and then was found hanging from a tree limb. Gruley captures the hardscrabble life of a recession-rocked small town and the deep interrelationships of the inhabitants while delivering complex, intriguing characters caught up in trouble. His take on contemporary journalism is Evelyn Waugh–worthy. Another winner. --Connie Fletcher

Review

The Hanging Tree is a terrific story, a dark-hearted mystery entwined in a bullet-fast thriller. Gruley is one of the good ones.” —John Sandford

The Hanging Tree is an engrossing, sure-footed mystery that manages to be both suspenseful and deeply touching.” —Gillian Flynn, Edgar nominee and New York Times Bestselling Author

“Haunting, observant, and filled with complex characters that will remind you just how much you don't trust your neighbors.  The Hanging Tree will pry its way into your imagination.  And it won't leave." —Brad Meltzer, New York Times bestselling author

“As with ‘Starvation Lake’ before it, ‘The Hanging Tree’ is an exceptionally well-written novel by an author who has mastered the conventions of his genre. Discriminating readers will be anxiously awaiting the third book in this promising series.” —Associated Press

“Gruley captures the hardscrabble life of a recession-rocked small town and the deep interrelations of the inhabitants while delivering complex, intriguing characters caught up in trouble. His take on contemporary journalism is Evelyn Waugh-worthy. Another winner.” Booklist

“Absorbing. . . Gruley vividly evokes the frigid Michigan winters and the even chillier atmosphere of an insular community determined to keep its secrets.” Publishers Weekly

“[The Hanging Tree] has it all—suspense, mystery, romance, detection, clear-eyed hometown nostalgia, professional dangers along with the other kind.” Kirkus Reviews

Product Details

  • Paperback: 314 pages
  • Publisher: Touchstone; Original edition (August 3, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1416563644
  • ISBN-13: 978-1416563648
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.5 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (42 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #181,385 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Bryan Gruley is the author of three novels, including the critically acclaimed THE SKELETON BOX, out June 5, 2012, as well as the award-winning STARVATION LAKE and prize-nominated THE HANGING TREE. He's a reporter at large for Bloomberg News. The former Chicago bureau chief of the Wall Street Journal shared in the Pulitzer Prize given to the Wall Street Journal in 2002 for coverage of the September 11 terrorist attacks. A graduate of Notre Dame, Gruley was raised in Michigan and spent the beginnings of his journalism career working at newspapers in Kalamazoo and Detroit. An avid hockey player and amateur musician, he currently lives with his family in Chicago.

Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
My claim in a movie review formerly featured on another website of how recent genres of fiction has treated the game of hockey, I held out the hope that someday someone would find the perfected formula to meld hockey and fiction. What it took was a new author Mr. Bryan Gruley to spotlight our sport in the way it was meant. As I re stacked my fantasy demon hunter paperbacks on the nightstand aside my bed, I became eager to delve into a more familiar world of journalism, hockey, and profound mystery.

Despite not having read the introductory novel, Starvation Lake, I wasn't to overly concerned that I was missing the crucial development of the series. Mr. Gruley's second book, The Hanging Tree takes off and hits the ground running re-introducing the main character in a passionate love affair, literally, from the opening pages. An ex-teammate's estranged wife gets the main character, Gus Carpenter, dangerously close to a real life game misconduct penalty, but still manages to toe the blue line with him helping the investigation of a woman whom they both grew up with.

Even through the eyes of the main character, Gus Carpenter, the real sympathy lies within the victim Grace McBride. Mr. Gruley was able to create a character through back story so deep that I actually felt like I was mourning her loss. As the plot develops, so does Gracie's mythology comparable to the now famous "Laura Palmer" of the Twin Peaks TV series. Most detective mysteries that I have read, the victim is usually someone expendable. But not Grace. Mr. Gruley successfully stirs the readers emotions believing that Grace McBride, the once-long lost sheep, didn't deserve the way she died. Justice for her was going to come from Gus and the family she left who loved her.

The next thing that I loved about this book is the steady pacing. Mr. Gruley most under-noticed talent is his descriptive pacing that makes readers feel that the town itself, "Starvation Lake", is an important character. The reader is locked in to the small Great Lakes town world where the air is cold and heavy in winter, but the gossip news travels like mercury. It's a town in the middle of a transition from being the accustomed neighborhood to the remote getaway destination of the well-to-do. But just as the native residents grumble at the influx of new money, they debate among themselves on the need for a fancy new hockey arena or stay loyal to the familiar old barn that housed many junior state hockey championships.

As far as the hockey action goes, Mr. Gruley masterfully worked in the hockey action as it was intrinsic to the plot. I like the reality shown within the story that not every player who laces up get to move on to the pro ranks. The town's arena is the perfect metaphor for the boulevard of broken dreams.

I would recommend this book to all when it goes on sale in bookstores August 3rd. It was meant to be enjoyed by hockey enthusiasts, journalist writers, and everybody else who had to return home and start over again.
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful
The Hanging Tree August 19, 2010
Format:Paperback
The Hanging Tree is another well-crafted mystery from writer Bryan Gruley. It is a sequel to Starvation Lake, but you don't need to have read Starvation Lake to enjoy The Hanging Tree. This story hits the ground running and never lets up.
Mr. Gruley's characterizations of the citizens of the small town are superb. All sorts of quirky characters abound. The protagonist, Gus, is a man the reader can truly relate to and root for. And every time you think you've got the mystery figured out, Mr. Gruley throws another curve ball into the mix.
His descriptions of the small-town, amateur hockey games are also enlightening and told from the prospective of someone who really knows and loves the game.
If you're looking for an intriguing, well-written, adult mystery, one that is not your typical cops and villains story, look no further than The Hanging Tree. After you've read it, go back and read the first book in this wonderful series, Starvation Lake. It, too, is excellent.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
My father spent this summers growing up on a little lake in the south of Michigan. Although this was many decades before the setting of the Starvation Lake series, in Bryan Gruley's books I hear the same echos of small town hopes, dreams and disappointments. He artfully captures the simple moments of life which can have a huge and unexpected impact on the lives of those immediately touched plus some you'd never expect to be moved by the outward ripples. It resonates as true, the details real. The namesake object of this second novel in the series is the perfect example: a small-town staple becomes the focus of a deep and absorbing mystery.

Gruley's writing goes below the surface to explore the simple acts of betrayal, love, doubt and friendship we all harbor. His characters, even the minor ones, always have qualities and contradictions that simply ring true.

How good is this book? I write books myself and while on deadline for one, I ended up shutting myself away for a day and reading The Hanging Tree cover to cover.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
No Sophomore Slump here
Often times the second novel in a series lags behind the quality of the introductory one, the groundwork has all been laid, the novelty of the premise has worn off a bit but the... Read more
Published 10 months ago by Jeanne Tassotto
Back to Starvation Lake
"The Hanging Tree" is the second of Bryan Gruley's Starvation Lake novels. We once again have intrepid reporter Gus Carpenter, working his beat and feeling his guilt over the... Read more
Published 10 months ago by Eileen Granfors
Hanging Strong
Bryan Gruley has done it again. His vividly painted community of Starvation Lake suffers another macabre, baffling murder and his newspaper-reporter sleuth once again must unravel... Read more
Published 12 months ago by Bruce L. McLaughlan
Tautly woven with nice hockey references to change it up
Tense and poignant at the same time.

I really liked this novel, mostly because the main character, Gus, is more than a little bit stubborn and hardheaded and when you... Read more
Published 12 months ago by madscientist_13
what a disappointment
What a disappointment! Being from Michigan, I thought I would enjoy some local color. The author made everybody from northern Michigan sound like ignorant cretins, who couldn't... Read more
Published 17 months ago by ejmac
Great Lakes
A really wonderful and really fast read. The best thing about this book is the vivid characters. They are complex, funny and fully realized. Read more
Published 17 months ago by GJ
Darkly complex - a good read
In "The Hanging Tree", author Bryan Gruley delves deeper into the past and present lives of the citizens of Starvation Lake. Read more
Published 18 months ago by Susan Weber
A Must Read!
From the moment Gracie McBride tied her pretty, pink sneaker to that of her boyfriend's black, football cleat and hung the mismatched pair over the branch of an old, oak tree, the... Read more
Published 19 months ago by John O. Raab
Reviewing: "The Hanging Tree" by Bryan Gruley
Gus Carpenter is not the only one who left Starvation Lake for bigger pastures in Detroit only to return home like a whipped dog. Read more
Published 20 months ago by Kevin Tipple
A Must-Read
Bryan Gruley's The Hanging Tree, is a suspenseful, character driven novel that does not disappoint. The second novel in the Starvation Lake series continues the story of hometown... Read more
Published 20 months ago by Heather Gudenkauf
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