ARC received through the Goodreads First Reads program.
hen I read the first chapter of this book, I thought I'd made a mistake in requesting it. Based on the first couple of paragraphs, I thought there was no way I'd be able to connect with the characters Eli or Emaline, and I wasn't sure about the writing style. I was SO WRONG. Starting with the second chapter, I was completely hooked.
Jack Todd has written a novel with a very strong sense of place, even if there aren't lengthy descriptive passages about the setting. I was able to clearly picture all of the scenes in Nebraska and Wyoming. Todd grew up in those states, and it shows.
The opening of the novel has Eli Paint arriving late for his daughter Velma's funeral. He has a brief interaction with two of his grandchildren, most notably Emaline. Emaline hasn't forgiven him for his treatment of her mother, and she is rather terse with him. On his way back to his ranch, the 8T8, he has a car accident that brings him closer to his housekeeper, Juanita. Juanita becomes the thread that connects Eli to Emaline later in the novel.
We then leave Eli for a good long while. Most of the book follows Emaline and her marriage to Jake McCloskey, a former prizefighter who doesn't seem cut out for either marriage or farming. They struggle to make a go of their Nebraska farm during the Great Depression. Life in the Dust Bowl is hard, and most of the book has a melancholy air. Todd captures the tedium of everyday life, in addition to Emaline's small joys. Jake is a really interesting character, and remains a puzzle throughout the novel. Why does he want to be married at all? Does he actually want to change, and can't, or does he simply not see the effect his actions have on others (or does he not care)?
I really don't want to give too much away, but it's hard. Todd is a good storyteller, and I really enjoyed this book. I have learned that it's part of a trilogy--I'll have to pick up the first book, and keep an eye out for the third's release.