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A Crooked Tree

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
This "meticulously plotted" novel explores "the mysteries of dysfunctional families . . . and adolescents' imperfect . . . understanding of the world of adults" (Sarah Lyall The New York Times Book Review).
"The night we left Ellen on the road, we drove up the mountain in silence."
It is the early 1980s and fifteen-year-old Libby is obsessed with The Field Guide to the Trees of North America, a gift her Irish immigrant father gave her before he died. She finds solace in "The Kingdom," a stand of red oak and thick mountain laurel near her home in suburban Pennsylvania, where she can escape from her large and unruly family and share menthol cigarettes and lukewarm beers with her best friend.
One night, while driving home, Libby's mother, exhausted and overwhelmed with the fighting in the backseat, pulls over and orders Libby's little sister Ellen to walk home. What none of this family knows as they drive off leaving a twelve-year-old girl on the side of the road five miles from home with darkness closing in, is what will happen next.
A Crooked Tree is a surprising, indelible novel, both a poignant portrayal of an unmoored childhood giving way to adolescence, and a gripping tale about the unexpected reverberations of one rash act.
"Beautifully written with tenderness and wisdom." — Elizabeth Wetmore, New York Times bestselling author of Valentine
"Suspenseful, affecting, and disarmingly evocative of childhood and the not-so-distant era of the 1980s." —Kirkus Reviews
"Filled with pathos, nostalgia, and the best kind of suspense.." — Liz Moore, New York Times bestselling author of Long Bright River
"Completely entrancing." —Julia Pierpont, New York Times–bestselling author of Among the Ten Thousand Things
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    • Booklist

      October 15, 2020
      A single mom, a car full of preteens and teenagers. After a long day, one kid in particular, 12-year-old Ellen, gets on Mom's last nerve. A few miles from home, she stops the car and kicks Ellen out. You can walk the rest of the way. Hours pass, and no Ellen. When she does arrive home, she's cut, bruised, bloody, and shaken. She's been picked up by a strange man and escaped what surely would have been a sexual assault or worse by jumping from the car. Her sister Libby, 15, tends to Ellen's wounds, protects her secrets, and enlists her gang of high school pals to track the attacker and seek revenge. In the process, Libby learns hard lessons about loyalty and friendship, the delicate boundaries between private and public lives, and the trustworthiness of family bonds. With its adolescent characters who apply teenage logic to adult problem-solving, Mannion's coming-of-age debut verges on being a YA novel. Probing, empathic and intense, the action capably mines the numerous uncertainties teens face when coping with situations that test their independence.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2020, American Library Association.)

    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 26, 2020
      An Irish American family unravels in Mannion’s atmospheric if overstuffed debut, set in rural Valley Forge, Pa., in the early 1980s. A fight among pensive 15-year-old narrator Libby Gallagher’s four siblings escalates on the long drive home from school at the mention of their estranged father’s recent death, leading their mother to order 12-year-old Ellen out of the car. Ellen walks for miles along the desolate highway, and when she returns in the middle of the night, dirt and blood smeared across her face, she tells Libby she’d hitched a ride from a “creepy” man and jumped out of the moving car after he molested her. Soon, a friend assembles a gang to hunt down and beat Ellen’s attacker, whom Ellen calls Barbie Man for his long white hair. But Ellen had told Barbie Man where she lives, and Libby fears he might come for them. Meanwhile, amid nostalgic memories of their father and a series of unremarkable high school coming-of-age scenes, moments of the girls' discomfort and scenes of sexual abuse give the book a prevailing sense of foreboding around other adult men. The novel builds suspense with additional sightings of Barbie Man, but it culminates in an implausible denouement with too many questions left unanswered. Mannion writes skillfully but fails to unify a hodgepodge plot. (Jan.)This review has been updated.

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  • English

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