The day was normal, and the town was failing abysmally. Sixteen-year-old Benjamin Destin and his father, Stanley, are in the next town over loading fertilizer into their trucks when a storm blows in and unleashes a gigantic tornado--the updraft--onto the plains of Oklahoma. Separated from his father, Ben must try to save his town, already suffering financially and socially from the shutdown of its Chrysler plant, and somehow rebuild and achieve redemption out of the destruction of the updraft.This is a 22,000-word novella. Two additional, never-before-published short stories from Brett Peto, "Barefoot Black" and "Pebble Creek," come after the main story.
Amazon Summary
Sixteen year-old Ben Destin lags behind his father as they
race home in their pickup trucks, trying to beat the massive storm that his
father senses in the “shark teeth” clouds and the “guttering storefront
fluorescent letters”. By stopping to
help an elderly woman, Ben narrowly misses the tornado and its updraft that
destroys his hometown of 346 people.
Destin and an injured shelter dog named Walter begin the slow process of
going through town, checking for survivors, friends, and family. In the empty shell of the Plymouth assembly
plant which had heralded the death of the town when it closed twelve years
prior, many of the townspeople had taken refuge and lived through the storm. Peto’s story narrates the destruction, the
despair, and then the healing of Destin and his neighbors.
Wow! For a short
story, Peto packs in so many layers of meaning - philosophical musings about
community, faith, relationships, optimism, and despair. I read this narrative before the horrible
tragedies in Oklahoma. Since the
tornadoes that just devastated Norman and El Reno, Peto’s story seems
especially prescient. Yes, I used a big word….inspired by Peto’s
vocabulary and figurative and descriptive language which really impress. On the other hand, a friend picked up the
story and thought it was difficult to read through because of the vocabulary
and because it was too dramatic.
There is so much to this tale; I reread it again and found
new insights and details that I’d missed on my first reading. The first page excellently conveys the feel
of the town which has shrunken since the closing of its auto plants almost a
dozen years before. The excellent
writing continues with descriptions of townspeople, relationships, homes, and
businesses. The descriptions of Marvin,
Walter, Bill, and Heather make you feel their personalities. The descriptions of the town help you feel
the immense power and killing force of the tornado. I could see the twisted metal, “bricks
stacked in haphazard mounds”, and the victims: Frankie Tardrudis (for instance)
– sandy blonde hair “partly covering the yawning wound exposing his spinal cord
in pale knobs of bone”.
Peto examines “nostalgic America” which was being “clawed
away”… but was “hanging on” because the people possess “a character unseen in
cities”. Ben Destin first feels a sad
“general cry for the general destruction” then moves to a weeping “specific cry
for a specific destruction” (Frankie).
He moves through different levels of acceptance, finally deciding that
“grief was fine” but “incapacitation was not”.
“We get one more chance to prove ourselves.” In the end, an unknown, dying boy trusts in the
townspeople to provide the comfort and safety that community in America provides. “Community is not an option, it’s a
requirement to be a society.” The boy’s trust and his death reawaken the
caring spirits of the townspeople – saving them because “he didn’t give up on
us.”
Except for some cussing, I felt like I was reading one of my
grandpa’s books from the 1930s. The
writing is intelligent – so much meaning is delivered in each small snippet of
dialogue, in every descriptive passage, and in every narration of Ben’s inner
thoughts. Adults will appreciate the
intellectual wording, the excellent description of the aftermath of this most
violent storm, and the emotion-inducing situations that evoke reflection on
community, family, friends, and faith.
Four and a Half Stars
*Reviewed by Colleen*
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That's a lot of topics in one book