Like a cross between Denis Johnson's Already Dead and David Lynch's Blue Velvet, Reap draws us into the hot, still air of a summer backwoods at whose fringes lurk danger and epiphany. Jessup Burke, a lonely, naive sixteen-year old, has grown up without a father in a jobless, indifferent logging town. Out of high school a year early, he now bikes through the woods with his fishing gear, daydreaming of his sweetheart and their secret "home" in an abandoned farmhouse. When Reg, an embittered, paranoid recluse fresh out of jail for growing marijuana, encounters Jessup hitchhiking, he is at first drawn to the boy's easily manipulated naivete, but the two soon become irreversibly bound. As Jessup unknowingly participates in Reg's perilous, criminal behavior, he also endangers himself when his relationship with Marigold, Reg's younger, married sister, goes beyond friendship.Jessup's rude awakening into adulthood is rendered in sure and supple prose in this dramatic, action-packed novel.
I was disappointed with Reap from the beginning. I realize there are rednecks all over the country. I don't believe the author did his Vermont rednecks justice.
The authors timeline was limited. I didn't connect with his characters. To go further might be a spoiler.
Trainspotting for Rural America!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
Despite the language being significantly different than that of Trainspotting, (Trainspotting being very phonetic) and the landscape being rural America, REAP still reminded me of the Brit book in its great depth of character and its knowledge of the seedy side of a drug culture (in REAP it's marijuana). It's a romp of a story, the characters are recognizable to anyone who grew up in smalltown USA, whether in the south or northe, or anywhere. At the same time, they are separate from us, their lives desperate and circumstances unforgiving. This book IS violent, and dark, and (I thought) frightening, but it is also compelling. It makes you look, despite not wanting to! It's a beautiful sad first novel.
a different take
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
Most of the reviews here, though very positive, seem to emphasize the darker and violent side to this book. But what struck me is that it also is very touching and poignant and FUNNY in places. Some scenes had me laughing one moment than nearly crying the next. REAP is a marvel of emotions and suspense. And I agree, very well written.
Finally
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
Finally! A writer in his/her 30s who can write a novel, a real novel, in 3rd person... I was beginning to think that the only thing a Gen X (Gen Y?) writer could muster for material was old televison scripts and first person angst ridden self referential pablum about how mean their yuppie parents were to them by buying them a used car for high school graduation instead of a new one, or how cruel their hunter boyfriends are, all while product name dropping more than Ann Beattie in the mid eighties.... For a real read, with in your face edgy dialogue great outdoor and inner landscapes, and characters with actual LIVES, though sometimes violent and grim ones, this book does it. The author is a smart enough to get out of the way of his novel, for the betterment of it. Refreshing. Read it.
Gripping coming-of-age story in the backwoods of Vermont
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
This is an excellent story of a young man growing up the hard way in a dead-end logging town in northeastern Vermont. The book captures the desolation of the surroundings, and I appreciated the genuineness of the characters. Reg Cumber, the pot-smoking, ne'er-do-well race car driver is a character you are unlikely to ever forget! Highly recommended reading.
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