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The Crooked Heart of Mercy

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

From acclaimed Canadian novelist Billie Livingston comes this powerful U.S. debut that unfolds over a riveting dual narrative—an unforgettable story of ordinary lives rocked by hardship and scandal that follows in the tradition of Jennifer Haigh, A. Manette Ansay, and Jennifer Egan.

Ben wakes up in a hospital with a hole in his head he can't explain. What he can remember he’d rather forget. Like how he’d spend nights as a limo driver for the wealthy and debauched….how he and his wife, Maggie, drifted apart in the wake of an unspeakable tragedy…how his little brother, Cola, got in over his head with loan sharks circling.
Maggie is alone. Again. With bills to pay and Ben in a psych ward, she must return to work. But who would hire her in the state she’s in? And just as Maggie turns to her brother, Francis, the Internet explodes with video of his latest escapade. The headline? Drunk Priest Propositions Cops.

Francis is an unlikely priest with a drinking problem and little interest in celibacy. A third DUI, a looming court date.…When Maggie takes him in, he knows he may be down to his last chance. And his best shot at healing might lie in helping Maggie and Ben reconnect—against all odds.

Simmering with dark humor and piercing insights, The Crooked Heart of Mercy is a startling reminder that redemption can be found in the most unlikely of places.

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    • Kirkus

      January 1, 2016
      Following the death of their toddler son, Maggie and Ben Smith struggle to find the emotional space not only to grieve, but also to mend their broken marriage. Livingston (One Good Hustle, 2012, etc.) crafts an achingly fragile portrait of two battered and bruised people. Two-year-old Frankie fell to his death while Ben and Maggie celebrated Ben's birthday with a little Xanax (a perk of Maggie's job tending to old ladies) and red wine. Shattered, Ben has little time to mourn before his younger brother, Cola, shows up in desperate straits, owing money to drug dealers. To make matters worse, their alcoholic and abusive father is in the hospital, testing the limits of Ben's compassion. Unable to silence the guilt-stricken voices in his head, Ben attempts suicide, ending up in a psych ward instead of a grave. A hollow shell, he can't even admit to himself that his name is "Ben." Maggie has moved out but is continually sucked back into the vortex of grief whenever ghostly memories of Frankie scramble onto her lap. Despite dissolving into tears at her job interview, Maggie is offered a job helping the eccentric 80-year-old Lucy McVeigh, a widow fond of spiritualism. Meanwhile, Maggie's brother, Francis, has moved in with her, awaiting rehab. Francis vows every day to recommit to his faith and to his job as a Catholic priest. It's a struggle compounded by not only his homosexuality, but also his love of the bottle, which landed him in the drunk tank and in a starring role, propositioning a cop, in a viral video. As Ben muddles through interviews with his psychiatrist and Maggie negotiates the probing questions posed by the mediums at Lucy's United Church of Spiritualism, Livingston beautifully teases out the bitter humor needed to endure the long shadows of grief. These hearts heal with scar tissue.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      January 1, 2016
      Both Ben and Maggie knew pain growing up. Ben's physically abusive father drove his mother away when he was a child, leaving him protective of his younger brother, Cola. Maggie's parents died in a car accident during her teens, leaving her older brother, Francis, to raise her until he left for the priesthood. But neither Ben nor Maggie knew pain like that of losing their two-and-a-half-year-old son, Frankie, who opened and fell from a window when they weren't paying attention. Ben responds by shooting himself in the head, miraculously avoiding death but lapsing into a dissociative state in a psych ward. Maggie, lonely and in distress in so many ways, turns to Francis for help but finds him heading for rehab, having starred in the headline, Drunk Priest Propositions Cops. Pain that is so palpable in these alternating accounts by the pairBen's in the third person, and Maggie's in the first personis relieved only in the redemption of the closing pages. From award-winning Canadian novelist Livingston, this is a beautiful and insightful paean to the human spirit and how it can heal.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

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