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Little Bird of Heaven

A Novel

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A searing exploration of the mysterious conjunction of erotic romance and tragic violence in late-twentieth-century America, Little Bird of Heaven returns to the emotional and geographical terrain of acclaimed author Joyce Carol Oates's previous bestsellers We Were the Mulvaneys and The Gravedigger's Daughter.
When young wife and mother Zoe Kruller is found brutally murdered, the police target two suspects: her estranged husband, Delray Kruller, and her longtime lover, Eddy Diehl. In turn, the Krullers' son, Aaron, and Diehl's daughter, Krista, become obsessed with each other, each believing the other's father guilty. By novel's end, the fated lovers are at last ready to exorcise the ghosts of the past and come to terms with their legacy of guilt, misplaced love, and redemptive yearning.
Told in halves in the very different voices of Krista and Aaron, Little Bird of Heaven is classic Oates—where the lyricism of intense sexual love is intertwined with the anguish of loss, and tenderness is barely distinguishable from cruelty.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Pity the narrator who draws Oates's unrelievedly grim novel about the consequences of a murder on the daughter of the suspected killer and the son of his victim. The book is spare in dialogue, providing little opportunity for the reader to change tone from the bleakness that enwraps the book's two central characters in the wake of the brutal killing. Oates is not trying to torture us but to examine a complicated intersection between love and violence. Kate Reading locks into the emotional tenor of Oates's novel, and her quiet intensity, free of unnecessary dramatics, is both hypnotic and focusing. The damaged souls Oates creates are fully realized--and fully heartbreaking--in Reading's perceptive reading. M.O. (c) AudioFile 2009, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from July 20, 2009
      Beneath the Sturm und Drang of Oates's third book of 2009 is the archetypal fairy tale: beauty and the beast. The beauties are the narrator, Krista Diehl, and Zoe Kruller, a waitress and singer who was murdered in Sparta, N.Y., in 1983. The beasts are the men, most notably Krista's father, Eddy, who, as Zoe's lover, is suspected in her murder, and Aaron Kruller, who discovers his mother's body and grows up repressing the thought that his father might have killed her. While the women are torn between attraction to the men and the need to escape them, the men must eventually be blooded, psychically and, in Eddy's case, physically. Eddy starts out a predator, with “tufts of animal-hair” sticking out of his undershirt, and ends up at the wrong end of a barrage of police bullets. While Zoe's murder and Eddy's suicide-by-cop five years later are the story's anchors, the heart of this novel is how Krista and Aaron are drawn together, however briefly. Oates unfolds the central gothic intuition—that beauty and the beast are complements—in a way that Charlotte Brontë would highly approve.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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