“It was still hot outside, though the sun had begun to lean to the west, and the first intimations of fall were in the air – that smell of dust and dry leaves, that annual lonesomeness that comes of summer closing down.”
Sixteen years ago, when Eventide was first published, if you had walked up to me with this book in your hand and said “Here. Read this. It’s a great book.” I would have said, “What and who is it about? Where does it take place?” You likely would have stated, “Well, it’s about ordinary people, and I can’t really pinpoint an actual plot. I mean, things happen - good and bad, but, well, you know. The setting is Holt, Colorado, a dusty plains kind of town. You know, partly on a cattle ranch and partly in a small, sort of simple village square.” I would have politely smiled and told you that I don’t have much time to read these days as I have two small children at home. Then I would have proceeded to grab a thriller or mystery novel instead. I missed out meeting one of the most gifted savants of the human heart. Four years ago I smartened up and set things right by reading Kent Haruf’s Plainsong and fell instantly in love. It took a pandemic to give me the next swift kick to finally read the second book in the trilogy.
“They came up from the horse barn in the slanted light of early morning. The McPheron brothers, Harold and Raymond. Old men approaching an old house at the end of summer.”
From page one, I was delighted to find myself once again in the company of the McPheron brothers. If you haven’t met this unassuming and lovable pair yet, you should grab Plainsong right away and get started before picking up this one. You’ll see some other familiar faces from that book here as well, and meet a few more. What I’ve learned from Kent Haruf is that heroes don’t really come in capes or white collars; they don’t carry magic wands, shapeshift, or stand up on pulpits. They do, however, look like your average human being and yet save lives and defeat villains.
“No. They’re not preachers. But they did save me, I don’t know what I would’ve done without them.”
It’s obvious to me that Haruf valued both the aged as well as the younger members of our society. I don’t know his personal family story, but I would guess that he was either a grandfather himself, or viewed the loving relationship of a grandparent and grandchild secondhand with wonder and gratitude. He understood the impact the elderly and children can have on one another, and that the value of that tie works in both directions. He also knew that families are not always constructed by biological links. They can come in many shapes and sizes, and what holds them together is not necessarily DNA, but love, support, companionship, honesty and understanding. What a wise and enlightened soul. Haruf must have breathed some of his own essence into the creation of the McPheron brothers. But these venerable men aren’t the only superheroes of this story. Children too are guardian angels in disguise as poor, beaten-down and hurting little souls – both to one another as well as to their elders. And yes, women can throw out life preservers as well. Please, please, let me meet Rose Tyler one more time.
I can’t recommend this series highly enough. The prose is unadorned but luminous and extremely affecting. The characters so tangible, you might find yourself looking for them as you go about your day. Perhaps you’ll see one of them at the supermarket. Maybe another will pop up at your local tavern. If you’re fortunate, maybe one will throw you a life raft, too. Or, perhaps you can offer your own to one of them.
“This can be a hard place to be alone in. Well, I suppose any place is.”