From Amazon.com
Juniper Tree Burning is the name Ray and Faith Davis give their infant girl when she's already several months old.
Juniper Tree Burning is also the name of Goldberry M. Long's debut, a novel full of images so luminous they have the force and presence of characters: cracked adobe walls, spiders, pianos, overripe apricots, ferns. Looking back, the eponymous narrator concludes that the fierce cry her parents took for assent to her new name was actually a scream of protest: "Out there on the mesa, dazzled by sun and bright sky, they give their daughter the name she tells them she was born for: Juniper Tree Burning. But this is not my name, and this is not my story."
Everything about the name is a mistake from the start. Even the tree her parents intended to celebrate--one that reminds them of the burning bush in the Bible--turns out to be no juniper at all, but a piñon pine. Later, young Juniper rechristens herself in secret: she chooses Jennifer Davis, a normal name for a normal girl. Jennie becomes the strong, fearless woman, the one who shoots pool and manipulates men, who puts herself through school and is going to become a doctor. But always, inside, she's haunted by Juniper the hippie kid, the one who wears clothes from the free box behind the co-op and suffers under the social burden of head lice and an outdoor toilet.
When Jennie's brother Sunny Boy Blue ends his life in the waters of Puget Sound, her precarious grip on normality crumbles. She flees her saintly husband, Chris, kidnaps her best friend, Sarah, and sets out in a junker Ford truck to re-create her sibling's last days--and her own family's flight from the Northwest to New Mexico. Long intersperses this quixotic journey with long, dreamlike scenes from the protagonist's childhood, and in many ways, it's hard not to prefer the latter. The grown-up Jennie is one tough, angry cookie, and she defies our sympathy as stubbornly as Chris's love. But Juniper Tree Burning is not just a book about growing up the child of hippies; it's a book about growing up the child of anyone who meant to do well and didn't. Jennie's story will resonate with anyone who's yearned to run away from an old self and found it trailing behind them--infuriating, embarrassing, infantile, cruel. --Chloe Byrne
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Publishers Weekly
How would you like it if your name were Juniper Tree Burning? Well, neither does the heroine of Long's stunningly assured, deeply affecting debut. Trying to leave her less than idyllic hippie upbringing behind, brash and blunt Juniper has renamed herself Jennie. But at her wedding, her past resurfaces in the form of her younger brother, Sunny Boy Blue, who behaves abominably even kidnapping her from the reception. Jennie refuses to forgive him, but when she receives word that he's jumped to his death from a ferry, guilt takes over and she abandons her new husband (she's had trouble letting him get close to her anyway) to follow Sunny's final footsteps from New Mexico to Seattle, hoping to find answers. For good measure, she kidnaps her friend Sarah, who's having problems with her fianc, and brings her along. How much of our history can be abandoned, and how much must be accepted? Jennie, a troubled young woman who has always believed that fate landed her in the wrong place with the wrong people, seeks to answer these questions as she copes with her feelings of responsibility for a brother whose birth circumstances (breech) and general disposition (disturbed) earned him the nickname "Backwards Boy." Moving seamlessly between past and present, first person and third, Long exquisitely mines the bitter themes of guilt, resentment and dashed hopes, depicting the desperate search for normalcy and the valiant spirit needed to pursue the quest. Anyone who has ever been a prickly pear, or loved one, will identify with this sheer wonder of a heroine. Agent, Jane Dystel.
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--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.