Growing up motherless and under the cruel eye of his alcoholic, emotionally distant father, Tiller Loomis seemed destined for a hardscrabble life. In the 1960s, the small Appalachian town of Sawyer, Tennessee offered few opportunities outside of working arduous hours on his family’s apple orchard. The one ray of light was his older brother Smith, a compassionate and gentle boy who salvages what might have otherwise been a brutal childhood. Kindness, he teaches Tiller, is a choice.
But when Smith is drafted into the Vietnam War, Tiller’s world collapses. Directionless and grief-stricken, he stumbles into a children’s puppet show at his church and ultimately finds purpose and joy through the strange, tender art of puppetry. Chasing his dream of puppeteering full time, Tiller lands in the gritty, graffitied, bohemian hothouse of 1977 New York City, where experimental artists and misfit idealists are using puppets to try to reach teens with a message of hope on a PBS show called Imagine Nation.
In Imagine Nation’s cast, Tiller finds a chosen family of dreamers and creators who will change his life forever, chief among whom is the beautiful Julie DiFrancesca, a fiercely vivacious woman who offers Tiller a chance at a life he never thought possible.
Narratively framed as a present-day documentary production about Imagine Nation, LOVE, LIKE APPLES takes us from the 1970s into the modern era, tracing how the ripples from one controversial but forgotten TV show and a complicated love affair continue outward over decades, while also exploring the indelible power of radical empathy and the lives of the artists who carry its flame in their hearts.
Jeff Zentner is the author of The Serpent King, which Kirkus Reviews named one of the best books of the 21st Century, as well as In the Wild Light, Goodbye Days, Rayne & Delilah’s Midnite Matinee, Colton Gentry's Third Act, and Sunrise Nights, coauthored with Brittany Cavallaro. He has two books—Wayfarers and Love, Like Apples—forthcoming in 2026.
Among other honors, he has won the ALA’s William C. Morris Award, the Amelia Elizabeth Walden Award twice, the Muriel Becker Award, the International Literacy Association Award, been longlisted twice for the Carnegie Medal, and is a two-time Southern Book Prize finalist.
His books have been translated into fifteen languages and been featured on The Today Show, Good Morning America, and in Vanity Fair and People Magazine. Before becoming a writer, he was a musician who recorded with Iggy Pop, Nick Cave, and Debbie Harry. He lives in Nashville.
I’m a huge Jeff Zentner fan. A huge, huge one. But when I started reading Love, Like Apples I was like, is this it? Is this really it? I even started looking up reviews. They were all five‑star ones. Okayyy… was I missing something? Apparently. So I read on.
The thing is, I had to get used to the structure. Telling the story like it’s a documentary with constant fourth‑wall breaks, especially in the first part, isn’t my favorite. But at the same time, the story grew on me.
Tiller’s bond with Smith, his escape to New York, the misfits he meets at Imagine Nation, and of course Julie—they all make this book a treat to read. The writing is gorgeous and so heartfelt, and Tiller’s feelings jump off the page. But somehow I kept my own feelings at bay. Until that last part, when tears started to burn behind my eyes. On a plane ride of all places where I definitely couldn’t start crying. But that time at Christmas, or the scene at the hospital, or when Billy ran off… I blew my nose, read a bit more, and blew my nose again. Those last pages wrecked me.
Love, Like Apples is a gorgeous story that burns with the fire of love, and it’s one we need so badly right now.
Some people never learn they have a choice in this life about who they’ll be. They never get the chance to see that there are no rails laid for them and they can elect for decency even if circumstance didn’t ordain them to it. That’s a damn shame. I learned when I was six. My brother taught me.
Jeff Zentner is just amazing at tugging at your heart and shaping a story with real precision. I wasn’t a huge fan at first, but the deeper I got into it, the more it won me over.
Thank you, Grand Central Publishing and NetGalley, for this beautiful ARC!
Thank you, Grand Central Pub and Jeff Zentner, for an advanced copy of this book to read in exchange for my honest thoughts.
Tiller Loomis recounts his experience of making Imagine Nation, a puppet show for teens that had a short run on PBS in the 70s, for the making of a documentary.
How the heck do a write a review that does this book justice? That does Jeff justice? This may end up being more of a thesis statement about why you should read Jeff Zentner’s books, but I don’t care. Believe me when I say, when I read books by Jeff, it makes me wish he wrote all of the books in the world. I don’t want to read anything by anyone else.
Jeff is quite simply a poet. His writing is so warm, fluid, and full of rich descriptions. This book (which I argue is his best yet) just BEGS to be read slowly and savored. I sat in it. Basked in it. And let it wash over me. And highlighted damn near half of the book. This book is raw and gritty, but also hopeful, soft, and so heartfelt. It’s hard to describe it, but it just *feels* like Jeff. He cracked his heart wide open to write this one.
As we follow Tiller’s life story and how he physically moves from Tennessee to NYC, Jeff delivers a a deep sense of place along the way. You can hear the sounds. Feel the grime. And you will wince, but all together fully understand, the descriptions of the smells.
This story celebrates art and the power of it in a way I have not read before. Art saves lives! And you can tell Jeff personally believes that deep down in his core or he would not have been able to write a story like this. In a lot of ways, knowing Jeff and his heart for youth, this felt like a deeply personal venture. The ways that the cast and crew of Imagine Nation push the envelope, take risks, and create without a safety net were inspiring. This book is a celebration of human connection, creativity, hope in a dark world, and making art despite not knowing what sort of reach it will have (but deeply longing for it spread to far corners).
AND THE ROMANCE! Golly. Say all you want about a man writing romance, but Jeff writes some of the most tender and emotionally intelligent men you will ever read. He masterfully shines a spotlight on soft-hearted masculinity. And Tiller and Julie’s romance is one that will surely stick with me - it was a sort of quiet and epic love at the same time. And my gosh? Tiller’s declaration of love? I was on the floor.
Have I convinced you yet? Have I convinced you to pick up this book about Tiller, a man “poured from a crucible of grief,” puppetry, and the rag-tag group that made a puppet show for teens in the 70s in gritty NYC? If so, then my job is done. If not, I’ll continue to be insufferable about this book. It’s not out until November, so well, there’s still plenty of time.
ARC (and an early one, so maybe some of my issues with its writing will be finished in the final draft) - but this one was just not for me. I'm not posting this review on any of the official industry platforms but ugh. I wanted to like this but it's so full of itself. 2 stars.
Good lines: "’We're making this show for kids who don't dream of the stars because they can't see the stars.’ … ‘They don’t have time to imagine worlds beyond this one because they’re just trying to survive the one they live in.’" p. 231
“Sometimes you have to choose joy because of the darkness and not in spite of it.” p. 402
"'In spite of everything, this was a beautiful world to live in.'" p. 418
------------ Okay and now for my critiques
//Everyone’s dialogue sounded the same (and verbose). Try to actually read this as the premise implies: an oral history; interview-style. Who monologues for THAT LONG and THAT OSTENTATIOUSLY
I’m still doubting the concept of puppeteering for a teenage audience. It doesn’t feel likely now, and certainly not in that time period. As humor, sure! As a “let me get real with ya, real talk” show, ehhh….
“The florid warmth of her skin with its dewy gloss of perspiration radiated off her. Her eyes met mine and I wanted to avert, bashful at such closeness, but the only thing I desired more was to gaze into them deeply. Under the workshop’s harsh fluorescents, they were the shade of sand-weathered seaglass floating in her freckles. [...] I’d be lying if I said I didn’t tarry in gauging the circumference of her head.” HOLY OVERWRITTEN NONSENSE BATMAN holy overwritten nonsense batman (demure)
“[The figs’] delicate, silken skin matched Julie’s eyes” p. 404 ARE HER EYES PURPLE??????? THAT IS THE SHADE OF A FIG SKIN wtf lol
Amazing amazing read. I laughed and I cried. Such a great premise and format for telling the story with the documentary interview and the characters immediately felt like people you know. The author also has such a great skill at describing things I learned quite a few new words!!
The story is told thru Tiller eyes. He is being interviewed for a documentary about a show he was on called Imagine Nation in PBS. It follows him from the very beginning when his mother dies in childbirth to his present day life. Ok I loved this one. Masterful storytelling. I was already a Jeff Zetner fan and this is one of my favorites from him. It’s just a great story. I don’t know what to even say. It’s so heartfelt. The story is sad, and at times funny, it’s beautiful and gritty. I was captivated from beginning to end. I loved the format and the way the story unfolded. I loved all of the characters. I loved everything. I have nothing bad to say other than I was sad when it ended. I will be recommending it to Anyone who will listen. Thank you to NetGalley and Grand Central Pub for providing me a digital ARC in exchange for my honest review.
I lack the words to express just how incredible Jeff’s writing is. His ability to make me feel nostalgic for a life so unlike mine needs to be studied. What a remarkable talent.
Go ahead and ask me my favorite book that I’ve ever read. Before this moment I would have had to think long and hard before giving a half hearted answer. The answer will no longer be half hearted and will also require no thought. Love, Like Apples was such a simple book at its core but managed to weave its way directly into my soul. Such a story and a group of characters. I will be buying the hard copy of this book and I can guarantee that within a year it will be tattered and worn and well loved.
In the scope of a lifetime, you have a few big tentpole moments if you’re lucky. Love, Like Apples is a walk through Tiller Loomis’s.
Now in his 70s, he is approached by a documentarian to tell the story of Imagine Nation, a short-lived 1970’s puppet show for teens. But to tell of his experience of Imagine Nation, Tiller has to start at the very beginning - his roots on his family’s apple orchard in Tennessee, his love for his older brother, how he finds the art of puppeteering as a means to cope with loss.
Then we learn how his puppeteering takes him to New York City in the gritty 1970’s, welcomed into a group of rag tag broken misfits, to write and act on a subversive and radical puppet show (!). There he meets his found family, he finds love, he explores the world in a way one only can in NYC. We meet Julie, the love of his life (except she’s dating the show’s head writer).
This book is the story of a gentle, kind man’s life and how puppeteering saved him and many others.
Rating: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
If you read that summary and you’re like “puppets??? huh?” I’m gonna ask you to just trust me.
As with all Jeff Zentner books, the writing is atmospheric and stunning. This is a quote from the book, but to me it sums up Zentner’s writing incredibly well: “It turned out that everyone responded to heart, humor, and respect for the viewer’s intellect.” This is the secret sauce of all JZ books: heart, humor and a respect for the reader’s intellect. Love, Like Apples sticks to the recipe.
If you follow the author on Instagram, you might know that he often shares videos of barges going down sloth-like down a river. Barges themselves are a bit ugly and yet there’s some meditative, serene quality to watching them move through the water. That’s what this book is like (except it ain’t ugly): slowly, purposefully moving through the tentpoles of Tiller’s life. And I sank into it a little bit, thinking for once, “Zentner, this is beautiful but you’re not taking me down this time.” Alas, I played myself because OF COURSE the final act of this book was like getting hit in the face with an emotional 2x4.
A moment for Tiller and his brother Smith. This was such a special relationship, with Smith largely acting as the only parent and family that Tiller had. What a powerful role Smith played in Tiller’s life, setting him on a course that allowed him to be confident in his kindness, self-assured in his approach to the world even when the world was unkind to him.
Tiller and Julie’s relationship was a quintessential NYC love story. My god. I read a lot of romance and there are few books where you can just feel that the characters are true soulmates. Tiller and Julie are true soulmates. Their relationship was my favorite part of the book.
Have you seen the Broadway show Avenue Q? Avenue Q was released in the early 2000s, and was considered radical for its time. Now put that on PBS in the 1970s. Subversion and radicalism are the heart of Imagine Nation. And each of the players brought their own deeply personal story to how they got into puppeteering and ended up on the show. These are not just freaks and geeks - these are broken and lost souls who somehow found themselves again through the art of puppetry. What a special group of people this is.
History and place also served as characters in this book. Zentner folds in some historical references that people probably have heard of briefly but are lesser known tentpole moments of the time. For example, the book references Freedom Summer rather than the bigger civil rights events like Selma. We live through the NYC blackout of 1977. The start of the AIDS epidemic. These events play a role in shaping our characters and their environment.
For hailing from Tennessee, Zentner does NYC exceptionally well. This book exudes the magic of NYC in a way that transcends time, even though the majority of the book is set in the 1970s. NYC is still a place where you can find the entire world in a few square blocks. Where you can find yourself or lose yourself. Where you can be whoever you want to be.
Finally, in a very special moment for me, while sobbing at the end of this book, I was rendered absolutely fucking speechless to have turned the page into the acknowledgments to see my own name there. I am but a passionate fan of Zentner’s work and will scream about it to anyone who will listen, so I am utterly honored to have been personally thanked by the author when I should be the one thanking him. I continue to be a proud member of the (unofficially official) Jeff Zentner Fan Club.
My thanks to Grand Central Publishing and Jeff Zentner for an advanced copy of this book, which releases on November 3, 2026.
After falling in love with Colton Gentry’s Third Act by @jeffzetner, I had high hopes for this book and immediately requested on NetGalley. Thank you @netgalley and @grandcentralpub the advanced e-arc. I cannot wait to hold this book in my hands when it releases in November.
This story to me is one of love, acceptance, belonging and hope. Tiller is sharing his experience from his difficult small town childhood working at his family’s apple orchard to New York where he and a group of people from all backgrounds and experiences all came together through a love of puppetry and wanting to make the world a better place. To show children that kindness and goodness is a choice you can make despite your upbringing and surroundings - a lesson he learned from his brother, Smith, and which changed his life. And isn’t that a lesson we all can learn?
Tiller is recalling his time working on and performing on a puppetry show for PBS called Imagine Nation during the uprising of shows like Sesame Street which opened the doors for them. Their low budget show was meant to be more socially conscious and touching on heavier subjects drawn from their own personal experiences. They touch on war, drug use, sexuality, all of which mirror things these individuals have overcome. They hope to show young teens true life lessons through the humor and heart of their puppets. The show was not long for the air but the documentary producer had found some of the episodes and wanted to know more. And more they received as we follow along on Tiller’s journey from the 60s to present day.
I was so very engrossed in the story of Tiller and Julie and the other members of the group. This is a story filled with loss and sadness but so much love both romantic and found family. I was invested and enthralled by this look into 1970s culture and the city of New York at that time and what happened to this group of dreamers.
As a child born in the mid 70s who, funnily enough, grew up on a farm sandwiched by two apple orchards and whose high school mascot was an “Appkeknocker” (yes, really) I remember watching PBS long after the intended targeted age thanks to only having three channels. This book really felt nostalgic and meaningful to me. Both in thinking about the past and also the present and what it means to kids being able to see themselves represented in the media (and books) and how important that is even now.
“This world is hard yet will show you mercy. It will find you—that ecstatic sweetness born of improbable circumstance. Love, like apples.”
I know this is long but if you’ve come this far thank you for letting me ramble. I hope people pick up this book and enjoy it as thoroughly as I did. And, in the meantime, pick up Colton Gentry and experience this author’s gift of story telling.
In "Love, Like Apples" Tiller, our main character and narrator, shares the story of how a 1970s public broadcast children's show (Imagine Nation) with puppets (think: Sesame Street, but for teenagers) changed his life and left a lasting impact on the world. Tiller is from a small town in rural Tennessee who discovers a love of and talent for puppetry as a teenager. In his 20s, he moves to NYC to pursue puppetry full-time and joins the cast of an upcoming children's show, Imagine Nation. The show's aim was to reach teenagers and explore issues that affect them in their daily lives, giving them a safe space to explore and learn: ."We won't always present a rosy view of America. That would be lying to teenagers, and they'd sniff us out immediately. But we'll always depict a vision for a country we believe can live up to its promise - the nation we imagine." What Tiller finds when he is hired as one of the puppeteers is more than just a paycheck; it's community, acceptance, family, love.
The story explores some sensitive topics, including drug use, drug abuse, PTSD, homophobia, suicidal ideation, and physical abuse. It treats of each of these topics with sensitivity and a gentleness that is honest and authentic. The story feels subversive but in small, subtle ways; as Tiller opines: "Sometimes radical gentleness can be the most subversive thing of all."
Despite the heartbreak he has had in his life and the challenges he has faced, Tiller's story always reflects joy: "Sometimes you have to choose joy because of the darkness and not in spite of it."
While the story is written as Tiller narrating his experiences through interviews for a documentary, the story is written in prose (not in interview format, like Daisy Jones and the Six). Zentner's interest in poetry is evident in the beautifully written prose; it is lyrical and atmospheric and draws the reader into the emotions of the story. Tiller's life story is an example of "how love, like apples, is a sweetness that emerges from improbable circumstances." And while the circumstances of this story were fictional, the characters and their stories and the historic backdrop all felt real. This one will stay with me for a long time.
Thank you in advance to the author and publisher for this advanced copy through NetGalley. I'm so privileged to have read this. If you loved Jeff Zentner's other adult novel, "Colton Gentry's Third Act," you'll love this one too. (If you haven't read Colton Gentry, what are you waiting for...?)
Love, Like Apples feels like Jeff took everything his previous teenagers needed (think Dill, Travis, Lydia, Cash, Delaney, CASH’S MOM 😭, Delia, Josey—not an exhaustive list) and said, I know exactly what they would have needed.
So he created Imagine Nation.
When young Tiller’s already tumultuous life is wrecked by his brother’s draft to Vietnam, he finds comfort in the most unlikely place- a church puppet program. So begins a dream of becoming a puppeteer.
And that dream takes him to NYC, where he joins the cast of a controversial new program called Imagine Nation.
I am overwhelmed with all I want to say to give this story its due justice.
This is the story of Tiller, growing up in a broken, grief-riddled home in small-town Tennessee and finding his place with the found family of the Imagine Nation team in NYC. It’s his love story, and a STUNNING one at that, but, ya’ll, it’s the story of a group of artists, of imaginations, who deeply want to give teens a safe place to exist.
And, the message at the heart of Imagine Nation creates the perfect foundation for the cast to build that same safe place for each other. Found-family gold.
“...where Sesame focuses a lot on basic learning…we would be placing greater emphasis on emotional and social learning. Teaching teenagers empathy and tolerance, presenting and giving dignity to experiences and stories that have lived in our culture’s shadow.”
I can think of no other writer who tangles together pain, grief, and brokenness with hope, joy, and possibility like Jeff. Love, Like Apples is raw and truthful, and that hurts…frequently.
But it also excels at reminding us there is so much beauty and joy, even when so much is ugly and hard. Jeff shines again, reminding us there are always more chances for goodness.
Listen, I know all the early reviews are warning you to have your tissues ready. Heed the warning, my friends. This was one where I had to repeatedly set the book down to collect myself before continuing.
It’s emotional, empathetic, and romantic. 100% everything I expect from a Jeff Zentner novel!
Thank you, thank you, thank you to @grandcentralpub & @jeffzentner for the early copy!
Oh my, oh my—this book is an emotional roller coaster. It’s such a tenderhearted love letter to the making of art, to found family, and to finding yourself along the way.
Tiller grows up in a small town in Tennessee. His mother died when he was a baby, and his father is an absent alcoholic. Thankfully, he has his wise, protective older brother, Smith, who loves him fiercely. But this is the late 1960s, and the Vietnam draft comes knocking.
Somehow, almost randomly, Tiller finds himself through puppetry. He sees a puppet show at church and is completely entranced. Growing up on an apple farm, he doesn’t know much beyond farming apples, but that chance encounter changes everything. Before long, he’s off to 1977 New York, where he finally finds his people, his found family.
I’m not even sure how this book will be marketed…romance? historical fiction?…but it is one of the most purely beautiful stories I’ve read. It’s coming-of-age, grief, friends-to-lovers romance, and a shining example of how art can save people. This is one of those books you have to put down just to cry.
When Tiller declares his love for Julie… wow. Some of the most beautiful prose I’ve read in a long time. If I wasn’t already married, I’d be stealing lines from this for my wedding vows.
I almost never read books written by men, but my goodness…Jeff Zentner is an absolute artist.
The book is written like a documentary about a 1970s puppet show called Imagine Nation. Think The Muppet Show, but aimed more at teenagers, helping them navigate life. It didn’t run long, but it built a huge cult following. Most of the narrative is Tiller looking back, telling the story of how it all happened, and it’s just… beautiful.
By far the best historical romance of 2026 and one of my favorite novels of the year.
Thank you to Grand Central Publishing and NetGalley for the ARC. I can’t wait for everyone to read this when it comes out in November.
Thank you so much netgalley. How on earth is this, at its core, about puppets? Like HOW. Because I found myself tearing up, emotionally connected, desperately seeking page after page...about puppets...
This story follows Tiller, a puppeteer who worked on a quickly cancelled TV show meant to help teens deal with LIFE in the 70's/80's. Its interview style so there is a ton of fourth wall breaking as we follow Tiller from his home in the rural south to the big apple.
There are some writers who could write about paint drying, city smells, or in this case puppets and it would be magical...THAT is Zentner. The line level magic here is next level, and I found myself snapping away pieces to store in my brain. This is the kind of line level writing that makes you want to be a writer, or read someone's entire backlist.
As for the story...man this is beautiful. It's really about morality, and right and wrong, and how do we teach people (in the eye's of Tiller's brother) to CHOOSE to be good people...and man it was just exquisite. It deals with some real issues very smartly: the vietnam war, drug abuse, the aids epidemic, racism, homosexuality...in just this absolutely stunning way that absorbs you into the story. Billy's moment? Cried. The blackout? Heart racing. Realizing the fate of the show and its impact on the interview. Brilliant. This never felt performative even being truly ABOUT performance.
It is a romance, and Julie/Tiller are beautiful...but in one of the few ways I've ever seen friends to lovers done correctly. Tiller's proclamation deserves to be highlighted, their ease into love studied...I dunno it just WORKED. It touches PG-13 at maybe best and is a shining example of how sex isn't explicitly needed to deliver romance.
Puppets. Just Puppets. I don't know how he did it but this is stunning.
It's no secret that I'm a massive Jeff fan girl and that I would have done absolutely anything to get my hands on this book. I don't have the immense vocabulary of words needed to explain how much I adored every page. I wanted to devour this in one sitting but due to life, I was forced to take it slow. And honestly? I'm thankful for that. When I wasn't reading this book, I was thinking about it. From the first page to the last, Love, Like Apples is enthralling. It's the earnest way Tiller moves through life. The unshakeable love he has for his brother, Smith. The way he loves boundlessly and with his whole self. The way that art, and the art of storytelling itself are represented. I think every word Jeff writes is remarkable. He has an understated, humble way of presenting these stories. These characters who are so real and fallible and honest. His words are timeless and poignant and carry such weight. He manages to make or do make a story that's set in the seventies feel so immensely relevant today. "But first, condemn a nation that smiles upon sending boys to kill each other, but stamps out any expression of boys loving each other." Like every one of his books, this one has carved its own spot in my soul so I can carry it with me always. Thank you @grandcentralpub and Jeff, you wonderful soul for this book. Quiet. Beautiful. Timeless. Love, Like Apples. Pre order it. It's out in November. You won't regret it.
I absolutely love the 70s, puppets, and NYC—okay, that is a complete lie. I’m ambivalent (at best) on all of those subjects, but in the immortal lyrics of Carole King, “Where you lead, I will follow”. Trust Zentner to deliver a gorgeous, heartfelt novel that would leave me a blubbering mess. I just reread The Outsiders, and Tiller feels like Ponyboy all grown up. As much as I wanted to devour this book in one bite, it demands to be savored. Love, Like Apples is quietly beautiful. Nobody, and I mean NOBODY, repeatedly delivers line after line of reaffirming, soul feeding prose the way this man does. Major themes of this book: art and its ability to save lives “Making art is a call into the darkness. You can never know everywhere the echoes reach”(pg 369) (especially teenage lives), nontoxic masculinity (which our society needs more of), religion (losing it & seeking it in times of grief), found family, and the seasons of love (try not to sing that last line). “Joy is how the universe tells us it favors our existence” (Pg156). This novel, as with his others, is an antidote to antipathy. The transcendentalist in him reminds us to seek healing in nature, and that there’s good in this world. A huge thanks to @netgalley @grandcentralpub @jeffzentner for the advanced copy. All opinions are my own.
I loved this book, and read it in a day, crying on and off for I'd say about a quarter of the book. If you've read Jeff Zentner's other titles, you know the emotion you're signing up for. It works for me, especially this title, which is so concerned with choosing softness and love in a world where that isn't always easy. As a girlie who loved Mr. Rogers, this spoke to me. This book is very much about found family, and a little ragtag group trying to make a mark (in this case, with puppets!)
That said, Forrest Gump was mentioned early in this book, and I could see how someone who did not enjoy that film might not enjoy this book. I think Zentner does a better job keeping this book focused on the characters, but we are also aware of History Unfolding. It stayed on the right side of the line for me, but sometimes only just (partly because at the end of the book I thought a character was going to make a reveal that would have been a little too pat, and I was glad it was a DIFFERENT reveal that made sense to me and to the narrative).
I have some other quibbles, but at the end of the day, this book made me feel, I didn't want to put it down, and I respected its big open heart. May we choose to be kinder.
“Sometimes radical gentleness is the most subversive thing of all.”
Radical gentleness shouldn’t feel revolutionary, but it does, and Love, Like Apples builds itself around that idea as its thesis. I hardly know where to begin with this book except to say I finished it in tears, completely overwhelmed by its beauty.
It’s not loud about what it’s doing which makes it hit even harder. It draws you in with such care and sincerity that you don’t realize how deeply it’s gotten under your skin until it’s too late to pull away.
It’s just…a profoundly beautiful book. The kind that lingers, and like all of Zentner's books it reshapes something in you. It's my favorite book I’ve read this year and I already know I’ll be evangelizing it the second it comes out on November 3.
"TOMORROW AND TOMORROW AND TOMORROW meets The Muppets; about the creator of a daring but short-lived PBS show that existed in Jim Henson's shadow, from his difficult childhood in Appalachia through the tumultuous Vietnam era, finding love and purpose, making art in 1970's New York"
A must read for anyone that loved "The Notebook." A timeless love story that goes deeper into the matters of the heart - through friendship, love and family. A book to stir the soul, bring reflection and ignite hope in what matters most to each person that reads LOVE, LIKE APPLES.
Thank you to Jeff Zentner for the great honor of being one of the first readers of this highly anticipated book. You can imagine my shock when I received an email asking me to read his work in progress and assess the authenticity of his representation of NYC during the summer of 1977. I literally tossed aside the book I was reading and ignored all my responsibilities to dive into LOVE, LIKE APPLES. I’ve since done four complete readings and have been impatiently waiting to share my thoughts.
If you’ve read a Zentner novel, you know his mastery of language is exceptional. Each and every word seems thoughtfully chosen and arranged in such a way that ordinary words create magic. You also know he has the uncanny ability to craft characters that tap into the very heart of what it means to be human. A seasoned Zentner reader knows to expect a soul shattering experience. Yet, he somehow manages to reassemble those broken pieces and leave the reader hopeful and even joyful at the end.
LOVE, LIKE APPLES is another master class in storytelling. Zentner takes the reader from the hardscrabble life of an Appalachian family apple orchard where the work is never ending and the future bleak, all the way to the gritty streets of New York City during the sweltering summer of 1977. The sense of place he creates is impeccable. No detail is overlooked or too minor. His representation of NYC during that tumultuous summer is perfection. The world is changing and so is Tiller.
Where Zentner excels and where this book shines is in the delivery. From the opening page I felt as if the story was unfolding through a conversation with a friend. The reading experience felt intimate and unhurried; it meandered as conversations do. I not only got the details of Tiller’s journey from small town Tennessee to the Big Apple; I also viscerally felt his grief and hope and joy. I came of age during that pivotal summer and Tiller did too, but the walk down memory lane felt fresh when seen through Tiller’s eyes and heart.
I thoroughly enjoyed this conversation with a friend and didn’t realize that Zentner had once again grabbed a hold of my heart until the tears started to flow. And flow they did. I recall wondering how that happened since there was no warning. One moment I was fine and the next I was a blubbering mess. You would think i’d be immune by the fourth read, but you would be wrong.
So what did happen? Zentner magic happened. I fell in love with these characters as I seem to do with every Zentner book. But this time it felt like I was part of the story rather than an observer. This book felt personal and I was fully invested.
There are many things to love about LOVE, LIKE APPLES including the Easter eggs scattered throughout. One of the biggest is the reunion with an old friend, but in a way that is entirely unexpected and gives the reader surprising insight into that character within a different Zentner novel.
I never imagined that I could fall in love with a book about puppetry, but here I am fully obsessed with another masterpiece by Jeff Zentner. Except this time I’m convinced he wrote this book just for me. I expect every reader will have a similar reaction. That’s his secret, his special sauce. His writing feels personal, intimate, like he’s telling a story just to you over a glass of ice cold lemonade on a warm summer night. That is LOVE, LIKE APPLES. It’s a gift.
Thank you to the author for this gifted copy to review. All opinions are my own.