$14.00
ISBN-13: 9780767931748
Availability: Usually Ships in 1-5 days
Published: Broadway, 7/2010
Naseem Rakha’s first novel, The Crying Tree is a tightly-told
story of a family torn apart first by the murder of a child and then by a
mother’s surprising act of forgiveness. It is a beautifully written
piece that presents a very realistic portrait of a family struggling to
put itself back together after a devastating loss. Though Rakha never
shies away from the sorrow felt by each family member, she helps the
reader transcend the pain by focusing on the larger issue of acceptance
and forgiveness.
For those of us who simply can’t imagine ever forgiving such a heinous
act, The Crying Tree is a testament to the human desire to seek
resolution. When Nate moves his family from their contented life in
southern Illinois to rural Oregon, he says it will be good for Shep, his
15-year-old son. For Irene Stanley, the move is unthinkable; she is
raising her children happily in her old family home. But Nate insists
the move is best. Once settled, Shep and his sister Bliss make friends
and start a new life. All is shattered when Nate arrives home early one
afternoon to find his son brutally attacked and murdered. What evolves
from here is a piece of masterful storytelling, where the layers of
secrets and deceits are carefully revealed until the nearly unbelievable
end is revealed.
Award-winning journalist Rakha takes her cue from a real-life encounter
with a woman she met at a peace rally who had just visited an inmate at
San Quentin’s death row, the man who had murdered her daughter. Though
the sorrow and grief of losing a child is insurmountable, “life also
offers us moments of inspiration, joy, and redemption, and as I wrote The
Crying Tree , those life-affirming emotions far outweighed the
weighty nature of the subject,” Rakha says.
Though I rarely turn away from “sad” books, I do draw the line at pain
inflicted on children. So I approached The Crying Tree with
caution. I can honestly say that while the struggles experienced by the
Stanley family were palpable at times, I was able to shed the grief
while connecting with this family’s journey to find equilibrium and
meaning again. The Crying Tree will make an excellent Book Group
selection as it provides lots to examine and discuss, and will
undoubtedly elicit strong feelings and opinions.
~Wendee