The Hook - An irresistible review by fellow GoodReads friend and author Betsy Robinson convinced me to read Where You Once Belonged.
Kent Haruf set his novels in the fictional small town of Holt, Colorado. I had only read Plainsong and Our Souls At Night, both lifetime favorites before picking up this one. Kent Haruf died in November 2014. In his final interview Haruf said
“Right now, I don’t feel like death is right around the corner,” he said in a final interview on November 24. “But if it is, it’s a bigger corner than I thought it was.”
A unique, reflective voice has gone silent.
The Line - There are so many worthy sentences that I chose to skip the line this time and to quote the opening of the book in this review in hopes of luring you in.
The Sinker – A book that tugs at my being and leaves me in wonder at the power of good writing is often the hardest for me to review. Kent Haruf’s Where You Once Belonged is described as many things, one being terse. The definition of this adjective, “sparing in the use of words, abrupt”, might find readers in agreement or debate. At 176 pages, it is short. I read it in one day, but it s certain to stay with me for some time. Since I finished this two days ago, I have come back frequently to contemplate this gem.
”In the end Jack Burdette, came back to Holt after all. None of us expected it anymore. He had been gone for eight years and no one in Holt had heard anything about him in that time. The police themselves had stopped looking for him. They had traced his movements to California, but after he had entered Los Angeles they had lost him and finally they had given up. Thus in the fall of 1985, so far as anyone in Holt knew, Burdette was still there. He was sill in California and we had almost forgotten him.
The late on a Saturday afternoon at the beginning of November he appeared in Holt once more.
He was driving a red Cadillac now”
As the idiom states
”A bad penny always turns up.”
and a concise, atmospheric, universal, story unfolds.