A Key to Treehouse Living, Elliot Reed
A Key to Treehouse Living, Elliot Reed
List: $15.00 | Sale: $10.50
Club: $7.50

A Key to Treehouse Living

Author: Elliot Reed

Narrator: Michael Crouch

Unabridged: 6 hr 5 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 09/04/2018


Synopsis

For fans of Mark Haddon, Tony Earley, and Jonathan Safran Foer, an epic tale of boyhood from an unforgettable new voice.

"Disorienting, weirdly wise, indescribably transparent, impossibly recognizable. Fun, too." —Joy Williams
A Key to Treehouse Living is the adventure of William Tyce, a boy without parents, who grows up near a river in the rural Midwest. In a glossary-style list, he imparts his particular wisdom on subjects ranging from ASPHALT PATHS, BETTA FISH, and MULLET to MORTAL BETRAYAL, NIHILISM, and REVELATION. His improbable quest—to create a reference volume specific to his existence—takes him on a journey down the river by raft (see MYSTICAL VISION, see NAVIGATING BIG RIVERS BY NIGHT). He seeks to discover how his mother died (see ABSENCE) and find reasons for his father’s disappearance (see UNCERTAINTY, see VANITY). But as he goes about defining his changing world, all kinds of extraordinary and wonderful things happen to him. Unlocking an earnest, clear-eyed way of thinking that might change your own, A Key to Treehouse Living is a story about keeping your own record straight and living life by a different code.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Angela M on July 29, 2018

4+ stars This is a different kind of book, not a straightforward narrative, and maybe a little risky for a debut novel, but it worked for me. Through glossary entries, the reader is left to piece together the story of a young boy named William Tyce. By very nature of the key, the glossary is alphabe......more

Goodreads review by Deb (Readerbuzz) on February 03, 2019

I'm fascinated with books that surprise me; this book surprised me. A Key to Treehouse Living is the coming-of-age story of a young boy who grows up without parents, who comes to live with an eccentric uncle, who builds a treehouse in a park, who takes off on a river journey, and the entire story is......more

Goodreads review by Frank on May 27, 2018

(Note: ARC provided by Tinhouse.) This is a charming and engaging Reed! Erm, READ. I may be a sucker for non-linear stories, or inventive storytelling methods, but this novel was written in such a delightful tone and with such a keen sense of purpose that I was not once distracted by the fact it is......more

Goodreads review by Lolly K Dandeneau on August 28, 2018

via my blog: [URL not allowed] 'Expectation The Brain spends a huge amount of time expecting things. The brain lives on patterns the way a blade of grass lives on sunlight.' This is a lovely novel written in alphabetical order, to make some sense of the disorder in orphan William......more

Goodreads review by Anne on August 31, 2018

I requested this book because the premise sounded so interesting; a book written as a glossary? However--and I know I'm in the minority here--it just didn't work for me as it did for many others. Apparently I have more of a linear brain as I struggled with the structure. And as sweet as the story wa......more


Quotes

Crisp and lyrical, emotionally assured, delightfully inventive—Reed has made a marvelous debut.—Kirkus

Dark yet uplifting . . . This novel's true joy may be the wonder it radiates about a world as beautiful as it is cruel. See 'OVERCOME BY EMOTION.'—Booklist

Inventive, illuminating . . . Reed offers an impressionistic and profound exploration of self and consciousness.—Publishers Weekly

William sets off down river in a Huck Finn-esque journey that takes him physically and emotionally through mystical and awe-inspiring spaces. . . . giving a book about existential darkness an undeniable sense of beauty and wonder."—Shelf Awareness, Starred Review

Disorienting, weirdly wise, indescribably transparent, impossibly recognizable. Fun, too.—Joy Williams

A Key to Treehouse Living—it’s terrific, funny, poignant and just weird enough, transcends that great form. I ate it up. —Jess Walter

A Key to Treehouse Living by Elliot Reed scrambles up all the customary codes of the novel to piece together, at last, the moving story of a lost boy searching out his place in the world. What appears as all indexed coda turns out to be a well-told tale and, more vitally for me, the accumulation of enormous incidental pleasures. —Joshua Ferris

Huckleberry Finn advanced out of antebellum doldrums into the poetic modern perverse, with the same charm. Subtle, daring, brilliant.—Padgett Powell

A Key to Treehouse Living is a beautiful book that treats language, family, childhood, and storytelling as flexible, luminous, dangerous things. William Tyce is a narrator as compelling as Mark Haddon's Christopher John Francis Boone and Jonathan Safran Foer's Oskar Schell. —Gavriel Savit

A Key To Treehouse Living’s precocious autodidact manages his abandonment at the world's hands by remembering that courage might be the ability to not think too long about the worst that can happen. A moving and funny and impressive debut. —Jim Shepard

Powered in part by longing and a need to make odd associations add up, this very appealing novel emplys jellybeans and gypsies, tree forts and rafts, and a character known as El Hondero to trace the odd conjuring that this narrator brings us in on. A memorable debut.—Amy Hempel

Captivating . . . Through its deceptively simple structure, A Key to Treehouse Living creates a portrait of a compelling, perceptive adolescent who keeps slipping through society’s cracks. —Foreword Reviews