Reviews for Grist Mill Road : a novel

Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

*Starred Review* An antihero in an Albert Camus novel ignored a dying child's plea for help and spent the rest of his days pounded by guilt. Toward the end, he cried out to the little girl to come back and give me a chance to save both of us. That's the entire point of this haunting, beautiful, and demanding novel. Patrick, barely into adolescence, stands by while his friend Matthew tortures young Hannah, eventually putting out her eye with BB pellets. Her eye socket, Patrick observes, looked like it was housing a dark smashed plum. The rest of the novel is about the aftereffects of these grim few pages. Matthew becomes a wealthy investor, and Hannah becomes a newspaper reporter. Patrick, still trying to explain away why he did nothing to help Hannah, lives in a half-world of jobs that don't quite happen. Inevitably, the three reconnect almost three decades later, and the unfinished business has its final and bloody working out. And Patrick finally has a chance to save both of them. The intensity of the storytelling is exhilarating and unsettling.--Crinklaw, Don Copyright 2017 Booklist


Library Journal
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Yates's (Black Chalk) sophomore novel is a fun-house mirror of a single, horrific incident that defines three lives. Patch, Hannah, and Matthew enter the New York woods in 1982 as young teens, and what happens there changes each of them irrevocably. The structure is a fine example of the Rashomon effect, set with alternating points-of-view of the three involved. Patch and Hannah tell their tales in distinctive first-person voices, while Matthew's story is recounted in the second person, which only adds to the divergence of accounts, along with an overarching third-person omniscient narration that's set 26 years later when the protagonists' lives once again collide. Smart, beautiful, and unrelenting prose puts the reader right into the scenes, making it difficult to decide which of the trio-none of them are particularly likable, but each is engaging in his or her own way-is telling the truth. VERDICT This fast-paced, suspenseful journey through the minds of these characters will fascinate Donna Tartt fans and readers who enjoy twisty, intellectual thrillers and unreliable narration. [See Prepub Alert, 7/24/17; library marketing.]-Charli Osborne, Oak Park P. L., MI © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.


Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

A teenage girl is tied to a tree and shot with a BB gun over and over again, irrevocably damaging the lives of the perpetrator, the victim, and the person who stood by in fear. Years later, the three still struggle to keep the pieces of their lives together. Told in a combination of first-person letters, portions of a manuscript, and third-person depictions, the story slowly reveals events leading up to, surrounding, and influenced by the incident. Misunderstandings, misinterpretations of events, and complex motivations abound in the half-truths the characters tell themselves and others. A nonlinear structure adeptly adds suspense to this complicated foray into the volatile emotional states of -characters who either continue to live in the past, use the past as a fulcrum, or simply move forward without facing their history. A talented cast of readers including Dan Bittner, Saskia Maarleveld, Graham Halstead, and Will Damron help listeners differentiate between the changing points of view and time periods. VERDICT Even in a plethora of audiobooks that deviate from the traditional linear plot presentation, this title stands out for its honest and unflinching look at people, their fears, and their recurring mistakes. ["This fast-paced, suspenseful journey through the minds of these characters will fascinate Donna Tartt fans and readers who enjoy twisty, intellectual thrillers and unreliable narration": LJ 11/1/17 review of the Picador hc.]-Lisa Youngblood, Harker Heights P.L., TX © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.


Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Yates follows his well-received debut, Black Chalk, with an edgy, intelligent thriller that explores the aftermath of a senseless crime. In 1982, 13-year-old Matthew Weaver ties Hannah Jensen, who's also 13, to a tree in the woods outside Roseborn, N.Y., and shoots her with a BB gun 49 times, including through the eye. Patrick "Patch" McConnell, a friend of Matthew's, is walking nearby and hears the shots. When Patch arrives at the scene, he at first thinks Hannah is dead, but she survives her injuries. Flash forward to 2008, when all three are living in New York City. Hannah, now a crime reporter, is married to Patch, who puts all his energies into his food blog and fantasizing about getting even with the boss who recently laid him off. A chance meeting with Matthew brings to the surface the anger and violence each has repressed. The reader's sympathies shift as each character brings a different perspective to the events that shaped them. Unexpected twists keep the tension high. Agent: Jessica Papin, Dystel & Goderich Literary Management. (Jan.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

A defining moment of violence inextricably links the lives of three young adults in Yates' (Black Chalk, 2015) psychological thriller."I remember the gunshots made a wet sort of sound, phssh phssh phssh, and each time he hit her she screamed. Do the math and the whole thing probably went on for as long as 10 minutes. I just stood there and watched." Yates' novel begins with this visceral description that immediately establishes a complex relationship not only between Patrick, the narrator of these lines, and Matthew, his friend and the perpetrator, but also between memory and the truth. The novel cuts between a first-person narrative of Patrick at 12, documenting the events that led up to this shocking BB gun attack, and a third-person narrative of Patrick and his wife, Hannah, in 2008. As newlyweds, they are trying to find their way through the economic collapse and Patrick's loss of his job; Hannah is a reporter interested in writing a true-crime book. She is also the victim of the earlier crime, and while she knows about Patrick's connection to Matthew, she has no idea that he actually witnessed what happened and failed to stop it. Much of the book explores the ways in which they individually struggle to come to terms with and exorcise guilt before the past can destroy their present and future happiness. If this sounds complicated, it ishumanly complicated and narratively complicatedbut successfully and movingly so. Yates manages to take a brutal incident and, by the end, create understanding for all three major characters involved: the victim, the perpetrator, and the witness. By doing so, he drives home the messages that truth is always subjective and that true, compassionate love is always redemptive. It's the compassion part, he argues, at which most of us tend to fail.Mesmerizing and impossible to put down, this novel demands full attention, full empathy, and full responsibility; in return it offers poignant insight into human fragility and resilience. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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