Media Reviews
Perfectly formed, beautifully executed. -- Mariella Frostrup
Beautifully crafted, alive and quietly magnificent. I read it in one mesmerising sitting. I had no choice; it wouldn't let me go. -- Roddy Doyle
Plainsong is nothing short of a revelation. I don't expect to read a better novel this year. Or next, for that matter. * Richard Russo *
So delicate and lovely that it has the power to exalt the reader. * New York Times *
Satisfying and warm, Plainsong is as purehearted a novel as they come. * Austin Chronicle *
Plainsong becomes a story of mythic proportion, and not just a story about a small town in the American West, but a story of universal concern. Our story. * Boston Review *
I've had the delightful experience once again of becoming so absorbed in a book that I couldn't have slowed down if I tried. The book is Kent Haruf 's Plainsong, the most controlled, cohesive novel I've come across in a long time. By this I mean that its various elements - character, setting, plot, language, even the names, even the title - all add up to a work as flawlessly unified as a short story by Poe or Chekhov . . . At certain points I was horrified by the austerity of the isolated lives in this story, and yet on every page I savoured the beauty of the telling. * Chicago Tribune *
Plainsong is a beauty, as spare and heartbreaking as an abandoned homestead cabin, always tough but humane, never sentimental. I loved the prose, as bright and hard as the winter sun sparkling off a sandy snow bank; and the characters, scrubbed to their essentials by the extremes of the Great Plains weather. It's a story that draws the reader like a heat mirage. -- James Crumley
True to the country he writes about, Haruf builds his characters out of small gestures and daily rituals, not dialogue. Theirs is a deep language, like the rumble before an earthquake. * L.A. Times *
[Haruf] writes with a plainspoken, hardscrabble edge that saves his story from sentimentality. It's a noun-and-verb-only style that's part Russell Banks, part Raymond Carver, but altogether his own . . . Kent Haruf 's splendid Plainsong succeeds beautifully. Elegant in its simplicity, elemental in its power, it arouses deep and hard-earned emotions. * Newsday *
Like all the best novels, Plainsong takes you into a world that is at once real and vividly imagined. Here is a poetry of landscape, a tender and passionate evocation of ordinary people in majestic country. It is a novel of the young and old, of the bonds that bind us to each other, and written with a kind of compassion that makes it ultimately powerfully uplifting. -- Niall Williams
Plainsong is a well-crafted investigation into how disparate voices, each unique and interconnected, can come together in the most unlikely of circumstances . . . Haruf offers a fresh approach by creating layers which intensify and deepen as the novel progresses, alternating between each character's life at every chapter. * Observer *
With deftness and precision, Plainsong orchestrates the overlapping lives of these and other characters . . . Haruf 's descriptions are sublime in their exacting simplicity . . . A beautiful, contemporary novel that reads very much like a story from another time. * Philadelphia Inquirer *
Holt, Colorado, a tiny prairie community near Denver, is both the setting for and the psychological matrix of Haruf 's beautifully executed new novel . . . Walking a tightrope of restrained design, Haruf steers clear of sentimentality and melodrama while constructing a taut narrative in which revelations of character and rising emotional tensions are held in perfect balance. This is a compelling story of grief, bereavement, loneliness and anger, but also of kindness, benevolence, love and the making of a strange new family. * Publishers Weekly *
Ken Haruf's prose murmurs a haunting melody through the intertwined lives of a Colorado community. It is a simple tale of life, death, love and hatred. * The Times *
A lovely read, illuminated by sparks of spare beauty. * Time *
It's written in a flat, palms-on-the-table style, which effectively suppresses what could have been sentimental in the story. Plenty to gulp over still, though. A first-rate, old-fashioned read. * Time Out *
Plainsong is the unisonous austere chant of a church service, and the hundreds of thousands of fans of this book have been nothing less than devotional in their praise of Kent Haruf. * Times Literary Supplement *
The emotional register of Plainsong, though kept in check by understatement and a stoic approach to the vicissitudes of life, is powerful. And Haruf works a quiet magic in the way he fits his characters' lives in with the landscape and weather that surround them. * Washington Post Book World *