Kirkus Reviews QR Code
THE GREAT GLORIOUS GODDAMN OF IT ALL by Josh Ritter

THE GREAT GLORIOUS GODDAMN OF IT ALL

by Josh Ritter

Pub Date: Sept. 7th, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-335-52253-5
Publisher: Hanover Square Press

Irascible Weldon Applegate, 99 years old "but still I was in my prime," relives his tumultuous days as an orphan among hard-bitten lumberjacks in this free-wheeling folktale by singer/songwriter Ritter.

The novel is set in the Idaho town of Cordelia, where Weldon's widowed father, part of a famous family of "jacks," came to run a general store and raise his son. Ignoring the Witch, a Finnish fortuneteller who says he'll die if he returns to jacking, he meets his maker in the form of "two hundred feet of white pine in [his] face." Inheriting the Lost Lot, a treacherous stretch of forest that Weldon's grandfather won in a card game, the 13-year-old boy becomes a thorn in the side of 7-foot terror Linden Laughlin, who wants it for himself. Though Laughlin is known as "the best jack that had ever lived," his co-workers have a way of dying in suspicious accidents. Will young Weldon be next? Spanning Prohibition, the Great Depression, World War II, and the dreaded modern world of flat-screen TVs, Ritter's follow-up to Bright's Passage (2011) is a scenic, phrase-spinning account that delights in detailing the perilous life of a lumberjack—the difficulty, for example, of getting gigantic trees to fall right and the daunting odds against transporting these "monster logs" to the river bank via a rickety chute. Even accepting the exaggerated reality of a yarn like this, it's not always easy to believe a 13-year-old could do and say the things Weldon does. And a framing story involving a calculating frenemy of the aged protagonist bogs down. But like the song without an ending that one character after another can't get out of their head, the novel has its own infectious quality.

In the broad shadow of Johnny Appleseed, this lumberjack's adventures captivate.