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What the Thunder Said: A Novel Kindle Edition
What the Thunder Said is the 2008 winner of the WILLA Literary Award for Contemporary Fiction.
In the Dust Bowl of 1930s Oklahoma, a family comes apart, as sisters Mackie and Etta Spoon keep secrets from their father, and from each other.
Etta, the dangerously impulsive favorite of her father, longs for adventure someplace far away from the bleak and near-barren plains, and she doesn't care how she gets there; watchful Mackie keeps house and obeys the letter of her father's law, while harboring her own dreams. After the massive 1935 Black Sunday dust storm brings ruin to the family, the sisters' conflict threatens further damage. Seeking escape, and wagering their futures on an Indian boarding school runaway named Audie Kipp, the two leave home to forge their own separate paths, each setting off in search of a new life, each finding a fate different than she expected.
Through shifting perspectives, voices, and characters, What the Thunder Said tracks their wayward progress, following the sisters, their children, and those whose stories intersect with theirs as they range across the high plains of the West in the decades after the Great Depression. Etta's hitchhiking encounter with a bookish couple in the Garden of the Gods; a prairie jackrabbit drive, during which Mackie's son, Jesse, discovers the cloth he's cut from; an old man's failing memory as he tells of spying on an Indian loner on the outskirts of a Kansas town; a middle-aged doctor's chance meeting with a mysterious wayfarer while on a quest to New Mexico in search of his lost youth; and Mackie's late reconciliation with her aged father, whose habit of silence has bred her own---all are rendered in vivid prose that captures the plains and the people who endured devastation and lived to look back on it.
Slow-gathering, powerful, with passages of haunting beauty, What the Thunder Said is the long-awaited third work of fiction by one of our most acclaimed storytellers.
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
"[You] admire not only the story she sets out to tell, but her ambition as to its scope."--The Boston Globe
"Engrossing . . . [Peery] demonstrates her virtuosity in writing from the perspectives of different genders, ages, and social classes."--The Virginian-Pilot
"Peery has a definite flair for language and characterization, and her description of the Dust Bowl is harrowing. . . . A disturbing story of marginalization during one of America's most chaotic and devastating times."--The Baltimore Sun
"A mesmerizing new collection of stories . . . Peery manages to make the hardscrabble vernacular of Oklahoma and the Ozarks sing like poetry."--Amy Woods Butler, St. Louis Post-Dispatch
About the Author
JANET PEERY, the author of The River Beyond the World and Alligator Dance, has received an NEA Fellowship and the Rosenthal Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. She lives in Norfolk, Virginia.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Product details
- ASIN : B00FILHC84
- Publisher : St. Martin's Press (November 19, 2013)
- Publication date : November 19, 2013
- Language : English
- File size : 3.3 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 322 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,854,633 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #4,674 in U.S. Short Stories
- #5,370 in Literary Short Stories
- #11,329 in Contemporary Short Stories
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Janet Peery is an American novelist and short story writer. A native of Kansas, she came to writing in her forties. She has published numerous short stories and four long works of fiction, including a novel that was named a National Book Award Finalist. She has received awards and fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Whiting Foundation, the Library of Virginia Literary Awards, the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and other recognition from various literary quarterlies and outlets, including the WILLA Award from Women Writing the West. She lives in Virginia.
Praise for THE EXACT NATURE OF OUR WRONGS (September 2017)
"It's rare to find a book that so mercilessly, and beautifully, and honestly concerns itself with middle-aged life. With the tender, enduring, fraught relationships among aging siblings and their even more aged parents. Janet Peery is a magnificent sentence-maker and a faithful reporter of the human condition as it regards this large and flawed and recognizable -- so recognizable -- midwestern family. I will gift everyone I know with a copy of The Exact Nature of Our Wrongs, just because it has such important confirmation to bestow upon us." --Antonya Nelson, author of Talking in Bed and Funny Once
"Never have the highs and lows of love and sacrifice―of addiction and enabling―and the inevitable passage of time, been so eloquently rendered in the moments and memories of everyday life. Janet Peery has masterfully connected all the points of one family’s complex constellation and emerged with a brilliantly moving and unforgettable novel." --Jill McCorkle, author of Life After Life
"Piercingly observant of the minutia that make life meaningful, Janet Peery paints a portrait in The Exact Nature of our Wrongs of a family both unmistakably familiar and unforgettably unique, one that will stay with you for a while. This is a richly accomplished, novel by a writer as wryly funny as she is wise." --Josh Weil, author of The Great Glass Sea and The New Valley
"A masterpiece. One of the wisest, most nuanced evocations of the hopeless quandary of family relations--the trying to understand, to get along, the failure and the suffering--and yet the grace of it, too." --Blake Bailey, author of Cheever: A Life
Customer reviews
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- Reviewed in the United States on February 7, 2022Words intricately woven to create vivid images of a multi-generational family members. Insight, gained by observing decades of decisions and consequences of those decisions. Beautiful.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 3, 2011Janet Peery's writing style reminds me of Steinbeck, but fresh and with a feminine slant, even when a male character has the floor.
The book started off a little slow, but once I had moved past the novella and into the short stories, I was hooked.
I've lived in Kansas and Oklahoma most of my life, and found the characters to be realistic and complete, not caricatures or flat stereotypes. The settings and descriptions were spot-on, as well.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 30, 2013If you haven't read Janet Peery yet you are lucky in once sense because you are in for a treat. Her writing style keeps your mind alert and yet she tells her stories with a clarity that makes you feel like you've stumbled upon a truth you didn't know but had a sense of. Read her.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 22, 2007This is one of the most interesting books I've read in years. I recommend it highly to anybody interested in good fiction--both avid readers and those who have let too much time slip by since their last read. Perfect pacing and control of revelation and suspense allow you to lose yourself in the delight of a good story.
There's music in the language and complexity in the characters and the plot lines. As a bit of a history buff, I'm often let down by this sort of novel. I was astounded by the accuracy with which this book brings a historical world alive.
The book is funny at times, and tragic, like our lives. The human relationships in the book are all so real I was often deeply shaken.
Of all the book's many admirable qualities, though, what I would say was the most rewarding to me as a reader (and RE-READER) is the this book's innovative form.
Like any great work of art, the form of this book honors our long literary tradition and renews, adds to, or deepens that very tradition through innovations so subtle and yet so fascinating that their meanings unravel only slowly--a strong brain-satisfaction lasted on long after I had finished reading.
It's a collection of stories that intricately interconnect. The gaps make the world of the book enormous; the overlapping makes it real. Characters from earlier stories turn up later fully grown, with their lives already lived, so that what I take away is the most amazing twist of the Postmodern "fragmentation" theme yet to be written: diverging plots and wandering characters somehow converge again because our lives are not only hellish at times and lonely and hard but magnificent--and mysteriously whole.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 26, 2010For those who are looking for a spiritual context in very modern literature, Janet Peery's stories offer much to discuss. Her characters often arrive at a "moment of grace." There is a redemptive quality to many of the stories. Just how and when these special moments occur is an excellent topic for discussion, as is the question of whether they are intentionally spiritual or just an illustration that spiritual meaning is present in our world and can be found in the most ordinary and extraordinary occurrences.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 14, 2009I admit to buying this book in order to fulfill my $25 purchase in order to get free shipping. Imagine my delight when I couldn't wait to get back to the stories. There is one novella and then shorter stories that follow, but they are all about the members of the original family. I am sharing this book with friends and hope we can use it in our bookclub. I am So glad that I read this book and will look for other books by Janet Peery.