Genre: General FictionCopyright: 2009
Pages: 304
Book Source: Own Purchase
Irene Stanley thought her world had come to an end when her husband finds their 15-year-old son, Shep, murdered in their Oregon home. Daniel Robbin, who had spent his teenage years in and out of trouble, gave himself up to the police and was given the state’s harshest sentence: death by lethal injection..
Now, nineteen years later, as the superintendent of the state penitentiary prepares to execute Robbin, Irene Stanley must reveal what she has been hiding from her family. That in order to survive the anger and grief she had at losing her son, she not only had forgiven the man who killed him, but had come to be his friend.
Her revelation stuns her family, church and community and cracks open the secrets that had been surrounding her son’s death. Secrets that reveal how little she understood Shep, her husband, or herself.
Achingly sad, that's the most fitting words I can find to describe this novel. Naseem Rakha writes beautifully and with such depth of emotion at times I felt the suffocation that such pain and grief brings. Maybe the death of my baby daughter brought these feelings to the forefront, brought home the honesty and realness of Irene's journey. Whilst the circumstances are world's apart, the death of a child for whatever reason is tragic and although I never withdrew completely from life or family, or resorted to alcohol or pills to numb myself, I'd be lying if I said the thought wasn't tempting.
For me The Crying Tree wasn't a book about the death penalty, although this debut novel grew from the author's experience as a journalist covering Oregon's first execution in 30 years. The essence of the story is immeasurable pain and grief followed by a moment of grace and a woman's journey to reach that point of grace enabling her to resume living, forever changed ... but living.
"You ever done that? Forgiven someone even though they don't deserve it?"
"No," Mason said. "No, I've never done that."
"Well, I got to say, it fills you. Whther you want it to or not, that kind of thing, it just fills you. It's like pain and grace all tied up in one."
"No," Mason said. "No, I've never done that."
"Well, I got to say, it fills you. Whther you want it to or not, that kind of thing, it just fills you. It's like pain and grace all tied up in one."
The story transitions easily from Illinois to Blaine, Oregon, from the time of Shep's death in 1985 to the time of Daniel Robbin's scheduled execution in 2004, and from a number of viewpoints; family members, Tab Mason, the compassionate prison superintendent and Daniel. The characters are portrayed in an honest and compelling fashion bringing added dimension to the already heartwrenching story of a family torn apart by tragedy, eaten up by hate and alienated from each other by their individual grief.
When Irene's connection with Daniel is disclosed, 19 year old secrets are also revealed, secrets that don't alter the fact that a boy's life was taken, but they explain the subtle feeling of 'wrongness' I picked up early in the story. They show the damaging ripple effect, that family and community members' narrow-mindedness and lack of acceptance can have and they reinforced my initial dislike of Shep's father, Nate.
Emotionally hard hitting but with a delicacy that brings tears to the eyes, there's not a lot of joy in this story but the end brings the reader a sense of relieved acceptance in the power of forgiveness and the bond of family.
Visit Naseem Rakha's website to find out more about this author, there's some interesting clips about her research for The Crying Tree.

This month on The Eclectic Reader one lucky reader can win The Iron King OR Ecstasy Unveiled OR Captive of Sin. Check this blog post for details. International entrants welcome.




































