Lee Martin is quite talented at creating an ambiance. Yes, there is no better word for it. His books create an ambiance that pulls the reader in; but unlike other authors who do the same thing, Martin's words evoke strong emotion. This can be a good thing or a bad thing, since his books seem to lean towards the depressing side. His most lauded work, "The Bright Forever", is about the kidnapping and murder of a young girl. As the narrator of the story says, "This is a story as hard to hear as it is for me to tell." That turned out to be as true for this book, "River of Heaven". As a reader, I want to be greatly moved by what I read- to tears in celebration, tears in shared pain, the inspiration to change my own life, the charged vigor for revenge on behalf of a character. Thus, I definitely appreciate and an awed by Martin's ability to depress me. on the other hand, I did need to put the book down every once in a while to take myself out of that frame of mind.
The focus in this book was on loneliness. I myself am no stranger to the draining, heart wrenching pain that loneliness can cause. I refer to the type of loneliness that is caused by secrets and by ailments that do not an easy cure; things that, even when surrounded by loved ones, are ultimately to be struggled with alone.
Here are some examples of his deeply moving words:
"Sometimes, I am learning, that is what it takes- the nearness of people- to make you feel there may be a good reason for all we suffer."
"That is what it feels like now- this night, my whole life after Dewey- a sleepy fog. I have always been trying to find the boy I was. I left him back there on the railroad singing with Dewey... One of the last times I truly felt joy."
"Now, here we are, each afraid to admit that we have reached the age where our circumstances sweep us, scared to death, into our last years."
"Please do not misunderstand. I claim no pardon for my wrong turns, but considering all that has gone on and all that is yet to come, I am content to feel the warmth of this love beginning, to call it the best thing that could have happened next in the story of my life... I will wait, my heart in my throat, scared to death, unable to stop what is coming, ready to give myself over, at last, to whatever bears down on someone- a man like me- from the other side of the darkest truth he can tell."
The characters are ones we easily begin to love.
Samuel Brady, the protagonist and narrator, a gay man who has lived lonely in every definition of the word, afraid to reveal to truth to the world. Who can blame him, when his own father shunned him upon learning the truth? His secret? Decades ago- when a boy he fell in love with who happened to love him back- threatened his ordinary way of life, he panicked and hurt him by calling him names. This led to a few of the other boys in town to rape him. Then, when he tried to redeem himself and allow himself to love Dewey Finn, his pride and fear of what others might think got in the again. When he was about to kiss Dewey for the second time, his brother Cal shows up and he shoves Dewey, trapping him on the railroad tracks. The National Limited train approaches, and Dewey cries out that he is stuck. Cal tells his brother, "Leave him." And Samuel does. The worst thing? The last thing he remembers is Dewey calling out to him, pleading him not to leave him.
Samuel is somebody that I can respect. It saddens me greatly how he has had to hide his true self from the world for almost the entirety of his life. I would like to think that this would not happen in real life today, but discrimination and hatred against the LGBT community is unfortunately still quite real and many communities and parts of this country. Like the above quote shows, he takes responsibility for his faults. No, he is not a shiny, exemplary character, but he has what is important. He is a man with integrity.
Decades later, Samuel is still living in guilt and fear, guilt of having killed Dewey, fear that someone will find him out. He has been kept company by a long long of basset hounds, his current one named Stump. (I love that his diet is canned duck and potato.) This occupies much of his time, being unemployed. His current endeavor is to build a house. Not an ordinary one, however. A ship. He learns that the ancient builders of ships had have faith comma to put all their heart and soul into it, then set it out to sea with no guarantee that it would ever return to Port. Most importantly, they built ships with which the sailors could easily watch the stars to guide them. The North Star poked a hole through the top of the sky. The Milky Way was a river running from heaven .
Arthur Pope, his neighbor, as lonely as well, I recently having to endure the loss of his longtime wife. He is the one who helps Samuel build the ship, as well as introduce him to The Seasoned Chefs, men that meet weekly to learn new cooking techniques. Arthur has his own secret. He was one of the boys who was there when Dewey was raped. He also followed Dewey that day to the train tracks. To do what? It was never quite revealed.
Arthur's granddaughter Madeline shows up soon after our story begins. In fact, she makes her first appearance in the ship. She quickly bonds with Samuel and begins to live with him since she is having a difficult time getting along with Arthur at the moment. It is Maddie who opens Samuel's great and shows him that he does indeed have the capacity to love again; that Dewey did not freeze his heart forever. I loved Maddie for her fierceness, and her perseverance despite the pain we know she has had to endure (a mere teenager, her drug addicted mother had left her to freeze in the snow). Yes, she does remind me of me.
Samuel's older brother, Cal moved away years ago to escape the Dewey situation, but shows up again now, after being caught in the middle of a terrorist hostage situation. Cal is the one character I felt a little empathy for, his pain, his inability to reconcile with the past, but still did not like him at all. We find out he was actually involved with the plot, albeit in a small way. Is always running away from things. and not responsibility for it. He abandoned his younger brother years ago, after being the one who shamed him into deserting Dewey Finn on the train tracks. He then abandons him two more times, once with his dog (fortunately were eventually reunited), and more time after he kills Zwilling. Why else do I dislike him? He is directly responsible for leading Zwilling, the real time terrorist, to his brothers place and murdering Arthur.
Alas, added to the drama is the reporter who comes to write a story on the ship for his local newspaper, Duncan Hines. Yes, that is his real name. ("So rich. So moist. So very Duncan Hines.") Dewey Finn is his great uncle. He feels that something was not right about the decades-old opinion that he committed suicide laying on those train tracks. He is only further emboldened by his grandmother's pain. Without any real suspects but a few suspicions, he begins to do a little investigating on his own.
Vera Moon is the archetypical outwardly-smiling-perfection-hiding-loneliness-sadness teacher of The Seasoned Chefs. She was the love interest if Cal Brady many years ago before he disappeared without any explanation to her. Since then, she did marry, but her husband is now gone and her children have moved out. She is, beneath her Martha Stewart exterior, someone with a great capacity to love but also needing it in return. After Arthur's death, she is the one who volunteers to adopt Madeline; Sadly, although Samuel would have been the obvious and best one to do this, the truth is that any adoption agency would investigate and reveal his history and preferences.
What did I not like? Two main things. One, Cal Brady. We never find out exactly involved he was in the terrorist plot or why he was killed the end. There are hints thar could have been the government keep him quiet; equally possible is that Zwilling's associates found him to avenge death.
Secondly, I disliked how Lee Martin dragged out the reveal of the story with Dewey Finn, what really occurred that night; it was referred to time and time again, taunting readers with the mystery, until the last chapter. Literally, once the story revealed, there were only five more pages in the book. Unnecessary for a great writer to do this; a great writer would be able to the reader without use of a cheap "whodunit" ploy. And I do believe Lee Martin is a great writer. Thus, unnecessary for him to do this and quite unfortunate. His mastery of words, assembling them into moving passages, have enough power on their own.
Looking forward to another Lee Martin experience.