Serena

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Book:

Serena: A Novel

Author: Ron Rash
Honors:
Genres:
Publisher: Ecco
The year is 1929, and newlyweds George and Serena Pemberton travel from Boston to the North Carolina mountains where they plan to create a timber empire. Although George has already lived in the camp long enough to father an illegitimate child, Serena is new to the mountains—but she soon shows herself to be the equal of any man, overseeing crews, hunting rattlesnakes, even saving her husband’s life in the wilderness. Together this lord and lady of the woodlands ruthlessly kill or vanquish all who fall out of favor.

Yet when Serena learns that she will never bear a child, she sets out to murder the son George fathered without her. Mother and child begin a struggle for their lives, and when Serena suspects George is protecting his illegitimate family, the Pembertons’ intense, passionate marriage starts to unravel as the story moves toward its shocking reckoning.

Rash’s masterful balance of violence and beauty yields a riveting novel that, at its core, tells of love both honored and betrayed.

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“Serena catapults Ron Rash to the front ranks of the best American novelists.” —Pat Conroy

“A complex and compelling study of human greed and the grimmest of lusts—that for wealth and power…An epic achievement.” —Jeffrey Lent, bestselling author of In the Fall

Reviews

Barnes and Noble

If there was an award for “Poet Laureate of Appalachia,” Ron Rash would certainly win it. In his fourth novel, Serena, Rash revisits the setting of his other books, this time to imbue the hills and hollers, as well as the hardscrabble inhabitants of the Depression-era North Carolina mountains with a lyric elegance that belies the violence of the plot. Plunging in straightaway (pun intended), the story begins with a deadly knife duel as George Pemberton steps off the train and into a tussle with the father of his former mistress, now pregnant with his child. Pemberton’s new bride, Serena, is eager to establish herself as her husband’s right hand, both in the business of overseeing a vast lumber empire, as well as dealing with the mother of a potentially pesky bastard. She steps in, coolly removes the knife from the chest of the dead man, and hands it to his daughter with advice to sell it. “It’s all you’ll ever get from my husband and me.” This astonishing juxtaposition of Serena’s cold, calculating beauty coupled with Pemberton’s sanguine earthiness is just one example of how deftly Rash has entwined his narrative’s poetic tenor with horrific accidents and the foretelling of chilling murders: “McDowell was in the room’s one cell pulling a dingy mattress off its spring base. As the sheriff did so, dust motes floated upward, suspended in the cell window’s barred light as if in a web.” As the Pembertons push their workers (often in harsh conditions) to decimate the snake-infested forest in the name of wealth and power, the result is this sometimes gothic, sometimes elegiac, altogether frightening tale that lays bare the consequence of ruthless ambition, while asking simply, “So what happens when there ain’t nothing left alive at all?” —Lydia Dishman

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