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Secrets of Eden : a novel  Cover Image Book Book

Secrets of Eden : a novel / Chris Bohjalian.

Summary:

From the bestselling author of <i>The Double Bind</i>, <i>Midwives,</i> and <i>Skeletons at the Feast</i> comes a novel of shattered faith, intimate secrets, and the delicate nature of sacrifice.<br><br>"There," says Alice Hayward to Reverend Stephen Drew, just after her baptism, and just before going home to the husband who will kill her that evening and then shoot himself. Drew, tortured by the cryptic finality of that short utterance, feels his faith in God slipping away and is saved from despair only by a meeting with Heather Laurent, the author of wildly successful, inspirational books about . . . angels.<br><br>Heather survived a childhood that culminated in her own parents' murder-suicide, so she identifies deeply with Alices daughter, Katie, offering herself as a mentor to the girl and a shoulder for Stephen who flees the pulpit to be with Heather and see if there is anything to be salvaged from the spiritual wreckage around him.<br>But then the State's Attorney begins to suspect that Alice's husband may not have killed himself. . .and finds out that Alice had secrets only her minister knew.<br><br><i>Secrets of Eden</i> is both a haunting literary thriller and a deeply evocative testament to the inner complexities that mark all of our lives. Once again Chris Bohjalian has given us a riveting page-turner in which nothing is precisely what it seems. As one character remarks, Believe no one. Trust no one. Assume all of our stories are suspect.

Record details

  • ISBN: 0307394972
  • ISBN: 9780307394972
  • Physical Description: 370 p ; 24 cm.
  • Edition: 1st ed.
  • Publisher: New York : Shaye Areheart Books, c2010.

Content descriptions

General Note:
Includes a reading group guide.
Target Audience Note:
All Ages.
Subject: Murder victims' families
Fiction
Murder victims
American Contemporary Fiction > Individual Authors +
Clergy
Genre: Suspense fiction.
Psychological fiction.

Available copies

  • 8 of 8 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Prince Rupert Library.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 8 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Prince Rupert Library Bohj (Text) 33294001703693 Adult Fiction - Second Floor Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2009 December #2
    *Starred Review* Who killed Alice Hayward? Was it the charismatic pastor who baptized her hours before her death? Was it her abusive husband, George, who then took a gun to himself? Or was it Heather Laurent, a famous author of books about angels, who may have a demonic side? On the surface, the crime scene at the Hayward's comfortable Vermont village home appears to be a straightforward case of murder-suicide in which George Hayward strangled his wife and then blew his brains out. But to Deputy State's Attorney Catherine Benincasa, things are rarely as they seem, a view that is reinforced when Alice's diary is found with cryptic references to Reverend Stephen Drew. Suffering from his own crisis of faith, Drew is particularly susceptible to the not-unwelcome attention of Laurent, who believes she is a guardian angel sent to help Drew resolve these conflicts. Always a solid craftsman, Bohjalian brings his trademark brand of astute character development to these delightfully ambiguous portraits of suspects, victims, and accusers alike, as he drops bombshell clues through sly, innocuous asides and weaves subtle nuances of doubt and intrigue into a taut, read-in-one-sitting murder mystery. Copyright 2009 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2010 February
    Trouble in paradise

    A conversation with Chris Bohjalian about his gripping new novel, Secrets of Eden, is sprinkled with unexpected observations and self-revelations.

    "Here's a strange confession," Bohjalian says good-humoredly during a call to his home in the small town of Lincoln, Vermont, where he lives with his wife and teenage daughter. "The better one of my books is, the less time it takes to write. The books that have taken the longest time to write and that I've really struggled over aren't necessarily the books that I think are my better books. There are some real clunkers in that batch."

    Secrets of Eden, he says, took just 12 months to compose, and he regards it as one of his three best novels. No question about that. It may even be the best of the dozen novels he has written thus far.

    "I'm interested in seeing what happens to ordinary people in extraordinary circumstances."

    Then, describing his workspace—the library in his "1898 Victorian village house"—Bohjalian says, "The library sits at the corner of the house and juts out ever so much, with southern, eastern and northern exposures. So I can watch the sun rise over Mount Abraham—I start writing usually at 5 or 6 in the morning—and I can chart the progress of my day and the progress of the book by where the sun is and where it hits my desk. As you can imagine, there are lots of books, piles of books, shelves of books. But it's pretty neat. I'm obsessive-compulsive about neatness. I need to have nothing on the floor as I'm working, and the desk needs to be pretty clean." He adds, "I think tidiness is overrated. I wish I could get over my clean-freakness."

    But maybe, just maybe, Bohjalian's "clean-freakness," is what underlies the clear, clean prose, meticulous research and vivid descriptions that are characteristic of all of his novels, and are particularly evident in Secrets of Eden.

    This latest story—a mystery that does not at first appear to be a mystery—unfolds through the overlapping perspectives of four central characters. There is the Reverend Stephen Drew, a small-town minister who suffers a crisis of faith when a parishioner, Alice Hayward, is killed by her husband in an apparent murder-suicide just hours after he has baptized her. There is Catherine Benincasa, the state's attorney, who is not so sure the crime before her is a murder-suicide and is also not so sure that the good Reverend Drew, who appears distant and cold, is not in some way complicit. There is Heather Laurent, author of best-selling spiritual books about angels who is drawn to the tormented Reverend Drew and whose own parents died in a murder-suicide after years of spousal abuse. And there is Katie Hayward, the teenage daughter of Alice and George Hayward, and longtime witness to—and a collateral victim of—her father's abuse of her mother.

    Actually, as Bohjalian reminds the caller, there is a fifth perspective in the book. "The first character that appeared to me is a character who appears in the novel only through her diary. That is Alice Hayward. The diary was really important for me because I wanted Alice to have a voice, even though the book begins with her death."

    Though he did not know it then, the seed for Secrets of Eden, Bohjalian says, was planted back when he was researching his novel The Law of Similars (1998) and a victims' rights advocate he was interviewing "reached into her folder and tossed onto the table between us two Polaroid photographs. The Polaroids were of head indentations in sheetrock. The advocate was trying to help a woman extricate herself from a violently abusive relationship. The photographs stayed with me a long time," Bohjalian says. Then after the publication of The Double Bind in 2007, dozens of women from across the country wrote him about his portrayal of the violent attack on his character Laurel Estabrook, wanting to know how he heard the details of their personal stories. "Violence against women in this country is absolutely epidemic," Bohjalian observes. "I thought about those images of head indentations in sheetrock and wondered if there might be a novel in that subject." He decided there was.

    So Bohjalian interviewed victims' rights advocates and victims of abuse. He "spent a good deal of time" with his good friend and pastor, to whom the book is dedicated, discussing crises of faith and pastoral counseling of women victims of spousal abuse. He asked his teenage daughter to read and critique a draft of the book, especially the section about 15-year-old Katie Hayward. "One of her notes," he says, "was, ‘I don't talk like this, and I don't have any friends who talk like this.' . . . My wife is also a spectacular editor and is the most honest reader I have. I've also been lucky to have the same editor, Shaye Areheart, since 1995. So I have two generations of very smart women preventing me from shooting myself in the foot."

    In conceptualizing his story, Bohjalian also drew on deep personal experiences. "My parents didn't have nearly as horrible a marriage as Heather Laurent's parents, but a lot of the fights described in the book were just pulled from my own childhood," he says. "All of my books have got strange unexpected autobiographic minutiae. [For example] there is a lot of me in Stephen Drew. Of all the first-person voices I've done over the years I think his might be the most me—that juxtaposition of faith and cynicism. Certainly I love my church and my fellow parishioners, but I can't tell you how many Sunday mornings over the years I've sat there in the pew thinking to myself, oh, suck it up and stop whining, for crying out loud."

    From this unexpected mix of personal experiences and careful research, there emerges a novel with resonant psychological and social implications. "I don't know that I think of myself as a social novelist," Bohjalian says, "but there's a component to my work that involves an important nonfiction issue. That doesn't mean that my books are polemics or op-eds. I'm interested in seeing what happens to ordinary people in extraordinary circumstances. But what I hope I'm doing first and foremost is giving a reader a ripping good yarn, a book that makes them want to frenetically turn the pages. I'm interested in a good story, and if that story is grounded in a social issue, then all the better."

    Alden Mudge writes from Berkeley, California.

     

    RELATED CONTENT

    Review of The Double Bind

    Review of Before You Know Kindness

    Review of Skeletons at the Feast

    Copyright 2010 BookPage Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2009 December #1
    Bohjalian (Skeletons at the Feast, 2008, etc.) returns with a story of violence.Part I opens with the first-person testimony of Stephen Drew, minister to a Baptist congregation in Haverill, Vt., that includes Alice Hayward, whose husband George tops off years of beatings by strangling her after dinner on the day she chose to be baptized. It quickly becomes clear that Stephen and Alice had been lovers, and the weirdly distanced description of the guilt he feels about her death is creepy even before we realize that George may not have shot himself after killing his wife, and Stephen is the top suspect in the eyes of deputy state's attorney Catherine Benincasa. The narration of Part II is problematic; while Stephen is arrogant and self-absorbed, Catherine is vengefully obsessed with the violence against women she sees in her work. The portrait of the Hayward marriage that emerges from both accounts is grimly predictable (angry, controlling man; passive, isolated woman). The novel improves dramatically with the narration in Part III of Heather Laurent, author of bestselling books about angels who has a brief affair with Stephen in the aftermath of Alice's murder. Heather's father killed her mother and then himself when she was 14, and she thinks she can help both Stephen and 15-year-old Katie Hayward, Alice and George's daughter, deal with their trauma. Heather's depiction of her parents' marriage has the specificity and complexity missing from the collage portrait of the Haywards, though her fixation on angels never amounts to anything more than a fictional device. Part IV, narrated by Katie, has a somber power as the girl imagines her parents' last hours. A schematic tale of battered wives, murderous husbands and the consequences for their traumatized daughters. Copyright Kirkus 2009 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2010 January #1

    While stylistically reminiscent of his earlier best seller, Midwives, Bohjalian's 13th novel is his most splendid accomplishment to date. The story revolves around the apparent murder-suicide of Alice and George Hayward and its toll on the couple's teenage daughter Katie, the lost faith of Rev. Stephen Drew, and the minister's relationship with an author of books about angels. As the narrative takes its turn through a series of voices, Bohjalian wends his way through the reader's mind, toying with perceptions, trust, and doubt. Did George in fact kill himself after strangling his wife? As lives are dissected, relationships are uncovered and their repercussions hypothesized and echoed. VERDICT A fantastic choice for book clubs, this novel deals beautifully with controversial topics of domestic abuse, faith, and adultery without resorting to sensationalism. Fans of Jodi Picoult and Anita Shreve will enjoy this breathtaking piece of fiction. [See Prepub Alert, LJ 11/1/09; also available in ebook, large print, and unabridged CD editions; a Lifetime TV movie will coincide with the paperback sale.—Ed.]—Julie Kane, Sweet Briar Coll. Lib., VA

    [Page 85]. Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2009 November #1
    Alice gets baptized and goes home to her husband, who kills her and then himself. Her minister understandably suffers a spiritual crisis. But is Alice's death what is seems? Now this I want to read; with a multicity tour. Big. Copyright 2009 Reed Business Information.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2009 November #2

    Bohjalian (Law of Similars) has built a reputation on his rich characters and immersing readers in diverse subjects—homeopathy, animal rights activism, midwifery—and his latest surely won't disappoint. The morning after her baptism into the Rev. Stephen Drew's Vermont Baptist church, Alice Hayward and her abusive husband are found dead in their home, an apparent murder-suicide. Stephen, the novel's first narrator, is so racked with guilt over his failure to save Alice that he leaves town. Soon, he meets Heather Laurent, the author of a book about angels whose own parents' marriage also ended in tragedy. Stephen's deeply sympathetic narration is challenged by the next two narrators: deputy state attorney Catherine Benincasa, whose suspicions are aroused initially by Stephen's abrupt departure (and then by questions about his relationship with Alice), and Heather, who distances herself from Stephen for similar reasons and risks the trip into her dark past by seeking out Katie, the Haywards' now-orphaned 15-year-old daughter who puts into play the final pieces of the puzzle, setting things up for a touching twist. Fans of Bohjalian's more exotic works will miss learning something new, but this is a masterfully human and compassionate tale. (Feb.)

    [Page 32]. Copyright 2009 Reed Business Information.

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