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FAMILY TREES by Linda Crew

FAMILY TREES

A Novel of the Northwest

by Linda Crew

Publisher: Manuscript

A widower and a divorcée shake up a wealthy Oregon family in Crew’s literary novel.

In 2009, the members of the Garland family are bigwigs around Corvallis, Oregon, as the wealthy owners of Garland Forests, a major timber supplier. Will Trask is the humble son of a logger who married into the family and now works as a timber consultant and realtor. Since the death of his wife, Shelley, he’s done his best to raise their sons, Gar and Cody, though he feels like he’s lost touch with the teens. Now Gar is off to college, and Will is feeling increasingly adrift. Bridget Garland—who, like Will, married into the extended Garland clan—is a physical therapist known locally as “the Good Witch.” She’s recently decided to leave her cheating husband, John—which may mean severing ties with his powerful family: “They may own the forests, but they don’t own this town,” Bridget tells Will. “Corvallis is my town too, now. And the part of my life I’ve loved is right here.” But when Bridget enlists Will to help her go up against their in-laws, the entire family gets entangled in a mess of secrets and real estate. Crew’s prose flows smoothly across the page, inflected with wonderful details about the forests that form the backdrop of her characters’ lives, as when Will reflects on a comment to a real estate client: “ ‘Trees just get big fast here.’ More complicated than that, but Will didn’t feel like explaining….[P]eople who didn’t know just looked at a big tree and had no idea the size of the true old growth forests of the past.” The plot is slow-paced, and relatively few dramatic events disrupt the overall placidity. That said, Crew constructs her characters with such care that readers will be largely content to follow them through the intricacies of their relationships. At around 400 pages, the novel is perhaps a bit too long, but the author uses the space to grapple with the ins and outs of grief, new love, and old rivalries.

An often pleasant, if somewhat lengthy, Oregon-set novel of trees and family.