The Juniper Tree (novel) explained

The Juniper Tree
Author:Barbara Comyns
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Publisher:St. Martins Press
Media Type:Print (Hardcover & Paperback)
Pages:187 pp (first edition, hardcover)
Isbn:0-31-244858-9
Isbn Note:(first edition, hardcover)
Pub Date:1985

The Juniper Tree is a 1985 novel by British writer Barbara Comyns. The penultimate novel of the author, it combines gothic literature, family drama, magical realism, and fairy tale.[1] The book contains allusions to the 1812 fairy tale "The Juniper Tree" by the Brothers Grimm, which is where the title of the novel comes from. The story features Bella Winter, a homeless, jobless mother of a toddler who is disfigured from a car accident and distancing herself from her abusive mother.[2]

Reception

The Juniper Tree met mixed reviews upon its initial 1985 release.[3] The Financial Times praised it as “delicate, tough, quick-moving . . . haunting,” while Kirkus criticized it as “a gruesome and emotionally erratic story . . . with a narrative that’s languid yet jarring, ranging from fecund, pastoral scenes to defacements, sudden deaths, and madness.”

The Juniper Tree was republished in 2018 by New York Review Books Classics, renewing interest in the novel.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: McClung . Sarah . 2024-04-15 . The Literary Outsider: How Barbara Comyns Wrote Her Way to The Juniper Tree . 2024-08-21 . Literary Hub . en-US.
  2. Web site: 2018-01-23 . The Juniper Tree . 2024-08-21 . New York Review Books . en.
  3. News: Zarin . Cynthia . 2018-05-16 . Barbara Comyns’s Inescapable Novel "The Juniper Tree" . 2024-08-21 . The New Yorker . en-US . 0028-792X.