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MAN IN THE WOODS by Scott Spencer Kirkus Star

MAN IN THE WOODS

by Scott Spencer

Pub Date: Sept. 14th, 2010
ISBN: 978-0-06-146655-7
Publisher: Ecco/HarperCollins

In one of the richer efforts by the veteran novelist, a compelling setup and stunning conclusion compensate for the thematic navel gazing through the middle.

Spencer returns to the scene of A Ship Made of Paper (2003), a novel that elicited some of his best reviews, bringing back writer Kate Ellis, her daughter, Ruby, and their hometown of Leyden, N.Y. Yet this novel isn’t exactly a sequel and can be read independently of the earlier work. Its protagonist is Paul Phillips, a master craftsman who refuses to compromise either his carpentry or his principles. He has become Kate’s lover and a surrogate father to Ruby after doing some work at their house. The divorced Kate, previously a newspaper reporter, is now the bestselling author of Prays Well with Others, an inspirational account of her recovering alcoholism and embrace of faith. With hints of Elizabeth Gilbert and Anne Lamott in “her kind of Christianity, one that includes a fair amount of swearing and swagger, left-of-center politics, and all the sex your average heathen would enjoy,” she has come to believe that her life has a plan, purpose and meaning, and that the love she shares with Paul is an essential part of that divine will. A Dostoyevskian complication drives the plot, as chance (or is it fate?) leads Paul to tragedy—an encounter with a stranger in the woods, a man beating his dog, that will change the lives of all concerned and upset the delicate balance that Kate and Paul have come to believe is their destiny. Ultimately, the novel’s title could refer as much to Paul, who must come to terms with the man he has become, after he did what he never believed he could. What seems to some like “a universe in which the pieces fit together beautifully” just might be “a universe where nothing is guaranteed and nothing can stop bad things from happening.”

The depth of the characters, the questions they ask and the challenge they confront stay with the reader long after the conclusion.