Friday, October 9, 2009

Serena by Ron Rash

Serena By Ron Rash
384 pages
Published October 2008 by Harper Collins

George Pemberton, partner in a lumber company, has returned to the North Carolina mountains with his bride Serena. As soon as they get off the train they are confronted by the father of George's teen-aged and pregnant former mistress. When the father pulls a knife on George, Serena encourages to George to fight back and George kills the father leaving the girl to tend for herself. George is by no means an easy man; he is tough on his help and quick to make examples of those who make mistakes. Serena, orphaned daughter of a lumbar family, steps right up with him, eager to show that she is every bit his equal. Together they kill or do away with anyone who's in their way. But when Serena learns that she will never have a child, she determines that George's son and former mistress must die and the pair are soon running for their lives.

I'm just going to say it up front--I loved this book. Rash's writing is just incredible; the mountains come alive and the story is every bit as character driven as it is plot driven. This one is almost gothic--terrible things just keep happening. These are not characters you know (unless you happen to live in the backwoods of North Carolina) but they feel so true to the time and place. Rash includes in his cast of characters a blind hag who delivers prophesies, a crazy preacher who warns his crew of impending doom, and the almost stereotypical widow woman who helps the young mother.

Serena is every bit as plotting and evil as Lady MacBeth. In the beginning, I was able to feel some empathy for her. She's an orphan and she's deeply in love with her husband. But this is one cold woman. As the book develops, more and more of her character emerges and soon you realize that this lady is capable of anything.

There is a wonderful crew that appears throughout the book. Rash uses their discussions amongst themselves as a way to explore moral issues and to explain things that have happened. Their conversations were one of my favorite parts of this book.

In their rush to expand their timber empire, the Pembertons are in a battle against time as they try to fight off the people trying to buy up the land around them for what is now the Great Smoky Mountain National Park. My timing with this book could not have been better since I had just watched the Ken Burns' series about the National Park series. It made reading about the battle between the people that lived on these lands, the people that wanted the natural resources and the people that wanted to preserve the land that much more interesting.

Like The White Tiger that I reviewed earlier this week, this is not a book for everyone. It's a very heavy read. I listened to this one and it was well-narrated (with the proviso that it's just really difficult for a man to get a woman's voice to sound right). I listen to books while I work and both nights that I came home without having finished this, I spent the evening wishing I would have brought the CDs home.

15 comments:

  1. Lisa, this has been on my wish list. I was wondering if you thought the print version might be a better choice?

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  2. I think the print version would also be great!

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  3. This sounds good also, you read interesting books

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  4. I've been wanting to read this one since it came out. I pitched it to my book club for the yearly selection meeting and it was shot down! I must not have pitched it very well because now every one of them wants to read it.

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  5. Thank you for your wonderful review, Lisa. This does sound like a moving book with a lot to it.

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  6. This is sort of a shocking plot. I love the sentence: "These are not characters you know (unless you happen to live in the backwoods of North Carolina) ..."

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  7. Sounds really cheery.
    Must be well written to hold your interest if the characters have so little to redeem them.

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  8. I might try to look for the audio. A dramatic reading sounds good.

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  9. I heard Ron Rash read an excerpt from this novel yesterday at the Southern Festival of Books in Nashville. It sounded great! I'm looking forward to reading it.

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  10. Great review. This sounds like one I'd like to read.

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  11. I've read some favorable reviews of this one a while back and I liked what you thought about the book. If I see it in my library browsing I will be more apt to grab it!!

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  12. I usually look for books with strong but honorable female characters - however this Serena sounds like it'd be dark enough for a October read! If I ever finish my Outlander series, I'll have to check this out :o)

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  13. Wow, this does sound heavy, but intteresting. Great review!

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  14. Sounds like a heavy read! I might not want to read it now :-)

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