The Understory

The Understory

First edition
(with LA Times Book Prize finalist sticker)
Author Pamela Erens
Cover artist Michael Marquand
Country United States
Language English
Publisher Ironweed Press
Publication date
Sept 2007
Media type Print
Pages 142
ISBN 1-931336-04-0

The Understory is the debut novel by American author Pamela Erens published in 2007 by Ironweed Press, and republished in 2014 by Tin House Books following the success of her second novel, The Virgins. It was a finalist for both the William Saroyan International Prize for Writing fiction prize[1] and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for First Fiction. [2]

Plot introduction

The story concerns Jack Gorse, a lonely unemployed lawyer with obsessive-compulsive traits[3] whose life is controlled with routine and ritual. The narrative alternates between his past life in Manhattan, and his present life in a Buddhist monastery in Vermont where he attempts to restore neglected bonsai trees. His routine in Manhattan includes visiting the same diner and bookstore every day and walking the same route to Brooklyn Bridge and through Central Park whilst searching for identical twins. But his equilibrium is upset when he is threatened with eviction from his long-term Upper West Side apartment and he becomes attracted to Patrick, the architect planning its redevelopment.

Title

As explained by the protagonist whilst considering the flora of Central Park:

What speaks to me most is close to the ground: the shrubs and vines, rather than the great elms, oaks, and maples. The understory, as botanists call it. In the decades after the war, when the city turned its back on the park—firing the groundskeepers, ceding greater and greater swaths of land to the muggers and drug dealers—it was not the big trees that began to disappear; it was the shrubs: the witch hazel and jetbead, black haw and sweet pepperbush. The park became like the city: skyscrapers, no texture. And that meant it was dying. The things that live at ground level are what hold the earth fast. . . . It is the shrubs that allow the park to survive.

Reception

Reviews were positive :

Publication history

[5]

References

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