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Twisted Tree [Hardcover]

Kent Meyers (Author)
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (51 customer reviews)

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Book Description

September 24, 2009
Hayley Jo Zimmerman is gone. Taken. And the people of small-town Twisted Tree must come to terms with this terrible event—their loss, their place in it, and the secrets they all carry.

In this brilliantly written novel, one girl’s story unfolds through the stories of those who knew her. Among them, a supermarket clerk recalls an encounter with a disturbingly thin Hayley Jo. An ex-priest remembers baptizing Hayley Jo and seeing her with her best friend, Laura, whose mother the priest once loved. And Laura berates herself for all the running they did, how it fed her friend’s addiction, and how there were so many secrets she didn’t see. And so, Hayley Jo’s absence recasts the lives of others and connects them, her death rooting itself into the community in astonishingly violent and tender ways.

Solidly in the company of Aryn Kyle, Kent Haruf, and Peter Matthiessen, Kent Meyers is one of the best contemporary writers on the American West. Here he also takes us into the complexity of community regardless of landscape, and offers a tribute to the powerful effect one person's life can have on everyone she knew.
(20090713)

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. In his beautiful and unsettling new novel, Meyers (The Work of Wolves) examines the effects of a murder on the residents of a small South Dakota town. In an opening sequence that is so disturbing it's difficult to read, teen Hayley Jo Zimmerman is stalked and abducted by a serial killer. The rest of the novel uses the rippling consequences of Hayley Jo's murder to explore the smaller rural tragedies in Twisted Tree, S.D.: Elise, a forlorn grocery clerk, judges everyone by their purchases and hides the secret terrors of her past as a missionary; Sophie Lawrence cares for her invalid stepfather while losing her sanity; Angela Morrison learns to accept the harsh realities of being a rancher's wife; Stanley, Haley Jo's father, channels his grief into a desperate need to connect with a stranger. The novel is brimming with arresting descriptions, and the western setting is employed to surprising effect, as in a sequence contrasting the removal of an invasive salt cedar bush with a father's awareness of his son's first crush. Meyers's small masterpiece deserves comparison to the work of Raymond Carver, Joy Williams and Peter Matthiessen. (Sept.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

"Twisted Tree is a piercing and original book, beautifully written and conceived. In it Kent Meyers has created a lyrical atlas, revealing all that lies beneath his indelible world of freeway towns and bison ranches--a haunted territory of regret, longing and guilt."-- Jess Walter, author of Citizen Vince and Over Tumbled Graves


"Twisted Tree makes me think of Winesburg, and the fine line between plain folks and grotesques--how one day, through the quirks of circumstance, we find ourselves on the other side of that line, and wonder how long we've been there. Like Russell Banks in The Sweet Hereafter, Kent Meyers spins out his intimate life stories from the hub of a smalltown tragedy and takes us into places we never thought we'd go"--Stewart O'Nan, author of Songs for the Missing and Last Night at the Lobster


"It's hard to find Chinese spices in Twisted Tree, South Dakota, but you'll find just about everything else in Kent Meyers' evocation of the American West, including a world of fascinating characters all tugged toward their central star, the lost girl Hayley Jo Zimmermann. Meyers, like Faulkner and McCarthy, knows that the smallest corner of the country can contain the universe. This is a brilliant and lyrical novel."--Marjorie Sandor, author of Night Gardner and Portrait of My Mother


"Twisted Tree brings all of the dynamics of rural America to life with vivid prose and true to life characters. Kent Meyers is writing some of the most groundbreaking novels about the West today. He looks at this part of the country without blinking, and writes it just as he sees it. A fabulous writer." --Russell Rowland, author of In Open Spaces and The Watershed Years

"In the riveting pages of Twisted Tree, Kent Meyers has expanded the map of his imaginative territory to produce his own brand of Faulkner's Yoknapatawpha County on the stark Midwestern plains. Revolving around one young woman's absence, the town's varied stories take on dramatic new dimensions. Present and past collide, exposing the delicate mix of history and dream that shapes the American landscape." -- Judith Kitchen, author of The House on Eccles Road

"A master wordsmith and storyteller, Kent Meyers brings us characters who, like so many of us, take years, a lifetime even to face their histories, lying to each other and themselves along the way. So the revelations don't come straight at us but from an oblique angle, which just makes the hard truths we learn even more devastating. The author's vision is wise and compassionate; he honors everyone's story, not out of charity, but to highlight the spectacular web we are creating each moment -- connecting time, space, people, the land. I don't come across novels like this very often -- gorgeously written, addictively entertaining, suspenseful, and spirit-full." -- Susan Power, author of Roofwalker and The Grass Dancer

"Twisted Tree is a lyrical, gorgeously wrought schemata of singular lives glancing off, gracing and intertwining abundantly with others’. In every chapter, its geography gathers dimension and explodes with exponential intimacies. With the hand of a deeply caring maker, Kent Meyers points us towards the mystery of which we are all part."—Lia Purpura, author of On Looking


"Kent Meyers inhabits his people's lives, opening their secret hearts without fear or judgment. Meyers loves as God might love: with wonder and joy, with infinite sorrow. Those bold and curious enough to enter the dangerous world of Twisted Tree will be tenderly transfigured, haunted and sustained by the intricate web of compassion that binds the living to the dead, the saved to the shattered." --Melanie Rae Thon, author of Sweet Hearts and First, Body


"In his beautiful and unsettling new novel, Meyers (The Work of Wolves) examines the effects of a murder on the residents of a small South Dakota town. In an opening sequence that is so disturbing it's difficult to read, teen Hayley Jo Zimmerman is stalked and abducted by a serial killer. The rest of the novel uses the rippling consequences of Hayley Jo's murder to explore the smaller rural tragedies in Twisted Tree, S.D.: Elise, a forlorn grocery clerk, judges everyone by their purchases and hides the secret terrors of her past as a missionary; Sophie Lawrence cares for her invalid stepfather while losing her sanity; Angela Morrison learns to accept the harsh realities of being a rancher's wife; Stanley, Haley Jo's father, channels his grief into a desperate need to connect with a stranger. The novel is brimming with arresting descriptions, and the western setting is employed to surprising effect, as in a sequence contrasting the removal of an invasive salt cedar bush with a father's awareness of his son's first crush. Meyers's small masterpiece deserves comparison to the work of Raymond Carver, Joy Williams and Peter Matthiessen. (Sept.)" -- Publishers Weekly



In his beautiful and unsettling new novel, Meyers (The Work of Wolves) examines the effects of a murder on the residents of a small South Dakota town. In an opening sequence that is so disturbing it''s difficult to read, teen Hayley Jo Zimmerman is stalked and abducted by a serial killer. The rest of the novel uses the rippling consequences of Hayley Jo''s murder to explore the smaller rural tragedies in Twisted Tree, S.D.: Elise, a forlorn grocery clerk, judges everyone by their purchases and hides the secret terrors of her past as a missionary; Sophie Lawrence cares for her invalid stepfather while losing her sanity; Angela Morrison learns to accept the harsh realities of being a rancher''s wife; Stanley, Haley Jo''s father, channels his grief into a desperate need to connect with a stranger. The novel is brimming with arresting descriptions, and the western setting is employed to surprising effect, as in a sequence contrasting the removal of an invasive salt cedar bush with a father''s awareness of his son''s first crush. Meyers''s small masterpiece deserves comparison to the work of Raymond Carver, Joy Williams and Peter Matthiessen. (Sept.)

(Publisher's Weekly )

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt; 1 edition (September 24, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0151013896
  • ISBN-13: 978-0151013890
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.2 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (51 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #500,943 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

51 Reviews
5 star:
 (13)
4 star:
 (10)
3 star:
 (12)
2 star:
 (13)
1 star:
 (3)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.3 out of 5 stars (51 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

17 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Her breath contained the stink of willful dying.", September 22, 2009
This review is from: Twisted Tree (Hardcover)


From the first chapter, the reader is put on notice: there is nothing predictable in this novel, but much to be savored. Meyers possesses an acute sensitivity for the complications of human behaviors, the intimate secrets of people battered by life and expectations, from the hard-working father who finds peace of mind tending a buffalo herd on his South Dakota ranch to the reservation Indian ridiculed by classmates in childhood, losing himself as an adult in the solace of intoxication: "He'd learned to crouch through life." The canvas is the vast territory of the Dakotas, where every day is a battle for survival and eccentrics harass well-meaning neighbors seeking to save the land from ruination. In terms of characters, Meyers has created a moonscape of an otherworldly place where loneliness howls at night, but day reveals simple folk who make few demands, an American landscape far removed from big city chaos.

The novel begins with a kidnapping, albeit with a unique twist, and a murder. A short sojourn into the mind of the kidnapper is the first indication that this will be an unusual journey, perhaps a difficult one. The majority of the novel reveals the reactions of the people of small town Twisted Tree, South Dakota, the father of the murdered girl, Haley Jo Zimmerman, a cashier at the local market who knows the buying habits of all the townspeople, a priest whose vows are breached, a step-daughter who finds consolation in daily revenge. There are aberrations: Eddie Little Feather, who meets a sad and gruesome fate one drunken night; Shane Valen, a loner as disturbing as the den of rattlesnakes that inhabits his shabby home- and just as deadly. But for all the waste, the lost dreams, disillusions and grief over the death of a girl already pursuing the destruction of her own body ("Her breath contained the stink of willful dying."), there is a strange poignancy and beauty to Meyer's work.

It is the women who bring grace to the story, gentle ministrations that touch the harsh lives of men who shun comfort other than alcohol. The women bring compassion to an indifferent, often cruel world, while the males stumble around like wounded bulls. In the midst of broken lives and stubborn justification, the women watch, some unable to endure, finally, such a barren existence. The vision of Haley Jo lingers long after her funeral, her long hair whipping in the wind, a promise in a place where most such things of beauty are broken. With Haley Jo as wedge, Meyers burrows into the psyche of Twisted Tree, the savagery and consistency of such a place, the deep roots of perseverance, the oddities and triumphs, a land devoid of pretensions. Meyers explores the remarkable, indelible truth of Twisted Tree, a secret, shocking view into the soul of rural America, where drama strikes then moves on, the prairie wind covering all with a layer of grit. Luan Gaines/2009.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Started Strong, Faded Quickly, February 6, 2010
This review is from: Twisted Tree (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
Kent Meyers' Twisted Tree grabbed me immediately. After a few sentences, it is clear that the opening paragraph of this novel is narrated by a twisted serial killer, who slowly lets the reader in on how he chooses his victims. It is a dark, well-written chapter. The novel's format, however, took away from the power of the opening paragraph. Each chapter is narrated by a different member of the small town the victim in the first character is from. The format is a bit disjointed and many times the writing felt too self-conscious to be believable and became a bit disappointing, especially given how compelling the first chapter is. Meyers tries just a bit too hard to capture the different voices in the town of Twisted Tree and dilutes a thought-provoking narrative into something much less powerful.
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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Is it truly a novel?, October 28, 2009
By 
Just_Karen (Portland, Oregon) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: Twisted Tree (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
I would say it is not. It is more of a collection of related short stories, ala Olive Kitteridge. Each of the "chapters" functions as a stand-alone story, some directly involving Hayley Jo, others barely brushing by her. It works as a portrait of place, that place being rural South Dakota with its delicate balance of community-minded and mind-your-own-business. The material concerns of the rural Midwest--weather, crops, livestock-- are interwoven with the private lives and deep secrets of a small town's population. Hayley Jo is not the only resident of Twisted Tree who is hiding in plain sight, and the delving into is fascinating.

Certain stories are brilliant, especially the housewife with the fear of snakes (I literally had to set the book down for a moment after this one to regain my breath) and the stories that show us the interior life of a feral man. The language used to describe the way he sees the world is densely poetic. Other stories fall into the "not quite there" category (the rancher and the waitress, the priest and the accident site), but always, the momentum of discovery is maintained.

Despite the back cover synopsis, there isn't a central "whodunit" mystery to uncover, but the hope of discovering what drove Hayley Jo down her sad path kept me reading. In the end, I don't think this was sufficiently explored, but perhaps it wasn't the point. This is a terrific book about an unbearably sad event, but it is beautifully written and softened with enough dark humor at the end to allow you to leave the book without too much scar tissue.

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