The Boys in the Trees by Mary Swan

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(Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: January 2008
  • 224pp
  • Sales Rank: 303,710
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: January 2008
    • Publisher: Henry Holt & Company, Incorporated
    • Format: Paperback, 224pp
    • Sales Rank: 303,710

    Synopsis

    A novel set in a small town in Canada that examines the aftermath of a murder/suicide in a close-knit family from multiple perspectives.

    The New York Times - Susann Cokal

    Inconclusiveness may be a part of life, but a reader of fiction might be forgiven for craving more closure than Swan doles out. Yet with its forceful observations and willed ambiguities, this challenging and often beautiful book can be as unsettling—and sometimes as maddening—as a long look in the mirror.

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    Biography

    Mary Swan is the winner of the 2001 O. Henry Award for short fiction and is the author of the collection The Deep and Other Stories (Random House). Her work has appeared in several Canadian literary magazines, including The Malahat Review, the Ontario Review, and Best Canadian Stories, as well as American publications such as Harper’s. She lives with her husband and daughter near Toronto.

    Customer Reviews

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    A deep literary workby harstan

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    December 05, 2007: William Heath was badly abused as a child. The scars on his body remind him never to hit a child, a vow he made to himself. He kept his personal pledge, but was a distant man, unable to display affection towards his wife and children. His employer in England caught William embezzling, but instead of sending him to prison he exiled him to Canada. There he and his family live in poverty, but he believes they are better than others in their poor community.----------- He has few job offers but accepts a job in Eastern Ontario in the town of Emden as a bookkeeper to Mr. Marl. Things look up for William and his family until he is arrested for embezzling from his new employer and in a twist of irony Mr. Morl bails him out. William gets a gun and kills his family members before surrendering to the law. His case upsets townsfolk who thought they knew him like his daughter?s schoolteacher, the doctor and his son.----------- While the crime is shocking and horrifying, the effects ripple throughout the community long after the victims are buried and the killer hung. For instance the teacher regrets her inactivity and inability to read the signs of violence and feels guilty that she allowed him to take his daughter out of her class. The doctor wonders if he should have had an inkling on Mr. Heath?s mental health when he came to pay his daughter?s bill and perhaps prevented the tragedy by stepping forward. Others feel shock and shame for ignoring the signs (think of the Genovese killing in Queens, NY). Thus the audience obtains a fascinating crime tale that focuses on how everyone missed the signs of pending violence and the guilt shared by all.-------- Harriet Klausner