Tom
Guthrie is a schoolteacher, struggling to deal with his wife leaving him and
their sons.
Ike
and Bobby are Tom’s sons, ten- and nine-years old, trying to understand why
their mother left.
Victoria
Roubideaux is a high school student, 17 and pregnant, ordered out of the house
by her mother..
Raymond
and Harold McPheron are aging brothers and bachelors, raising sheep.
They
all live in small-town Holt, Colorado. Their lives, and those of a number of
minor characters will crisscross and intersect in Plainsong,
the novel by Kent Haruf
(1943-2014) first published in 1999. It was the first of three novels is what
is now called The Plainsong Trilogy,
which includes Eventide
(2004) and Benediction
(2013).
Plainsong is a beautiful
novel. It has an enchanting simplicity, enhanced (or perhaps resulting from)
the use of simple, uncomplicated language and the absolute lack of quotation
marks. Disconcerting at first, this deliberate omission serves to focus on the
quiet kind of novel this is.
Kent Haruf |
Quiet,
but things happen. Tom experiences conflict with a student and his parents, and
finds himself sought after by two women. The McPheron brothers unexpectedly
welcome the pregnant Victoria into their home. The boys learn much about the
town and its people from their paper route. The characters are drawn fine and
well. Even the minor characters are drawn with an almost reverence.
People
matter in Plainsong because they are
all image bearers. They all give and experience grace. Broken people living broken lives come
together in a picture of small-town life that has likely vanished in most
places. Yet it is no rose-tinted portrayal, but rather a painting of a town and
its people with all their flaws, made the more beautiful because of them.
The novel was a finalist for the National Book Award for fiction.
The novel was a finalist for the National Book Award for fiction.
Related:
Kent Haruf’s
Holt County, Colorado, in Pictures, via Picador Blog.
Top photograph by Ken Kistler via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
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