The Flicker of Old Dreams: A Novel
The Flicker of Old Dreams: A Novel book cover

The Flicker of Old Dreams: A Novel

Paperback – Unabridged, March 13, 2018

Price
$8.50
Format
Paperback
Pages
320
Publisher
Harper Perennial
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0062686701
Dimensions
5.31 x 0.72 x 8 inches
Weight
9.5 ounces

Description

“Susan Henderson offers us the wondrous, sharp picture of the small town of Petroleum, Montana where the past comes back on two feet and a blizzard rages. The Flicker of Old Dreams is a fine novel, heartfelt and bracing company. It is a gem.” — Ron Carlson, author of Five Skies “Susan Henderson’s The Flicker of Old Dreams is a clear-eyed, wise, and poignant tale of losses and gains, told with tremendous empathy and grace.” — Therese Anne Fowler, New York Times bestselling author of Z: A Novel of Zelda Fitzgerald “ The Flicker of Old Dreams is at once a vivid and wildly compelling study of small town American life and an intimate and incisive exploration of the human condition, from love to loss and beyond.” xa0 — Jonathan Evison, the New York Times “Susan Henderson has secured her position as one of my favorite novelists. You won’t be able to turn away from this tender, elegiac and haunting novel that beautifully exposes the human heart, the human body, and the human condition.” — Jessica Anya Blau, author of the nationally bestselling novel The Summer of Naked Swim Parties “This novel is so breathtakingly good, so exquisitely written. About a female mortician, about a childhood tragedy that still haunts a damaged young man, about the endless landscape and about those tiny sparks of possibility. Oh my God. Trust me. This book. This book. This Book.” — Caroline Leavitt, New York Times bestselling author of Cruel Beautiful World “A truly magnificent work of art. The soul energy that is pushing through this story is unstoppable, beautiful, vulnerable, powerful.” — Jessica Keener, author of Night Swim and Strangers in Budapest “Like the wind scours paint from an old grain silo, Susan Henderson’s writing scours away all the pretend niceness of small town life in Montana to reveal the frayed and patched nature of humanity.” — Helen Simonson, New York Times bestselling author of The Summer Before the War The dead come to me vulnerable,xa0sharing their stories and secrets. . . . Mary Crampton has spent all of her thirty years in Petroleum, a small western town once supported by its grain industry. Living at home, she works as the embalmer in her father’s mortuary: an unlikely job that has long marked her as an outsider. Yet, to Mary, there is a satisfying art to positioning and styling each body to capture the essence of a subject’s life. Though some townsfolk pretend that the community is thriving, the truth is that Petroleum is crumbling away—a process that began twenty years ago when an accident in the grain elevator killed a beloved high school athlete. The granary closed for good, the train no longer stopped in town, and Robert Golden, the victim’s younger brother, was widely blamed for the tragedy and shipped off to live elsewhere. Now, out of the blue, Robert has returned to care for his terminally ill mother. After Mary—reserved, introspective, and deeply lonely—strikes up an unlikely friendship with him, shocking the locals, she finally begins to consider what might happen if she dared to leave Petroleum. Set in America’s Great Plains, The Flicker of Old Dreams explores themes of resilience, redemption, and loyalty in prose as lyrical as it is powerful. Susan Henderson is a four-time Pushcart Prize nominee and the recipient of an Academy of American Poets Prize. She is the author of two novels, The Flicker of Old Dreams and Up from the Blue , both published by HarperCollins. Susan lives in Kings Park, New York and blogs at the writer support group, LitPark .com. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • High Plains Book Award Winner for Fiction
  • Western Writers of America Spur Award Winner for Best Contemporary  Western Novel
  • WILLA Literary Award Winner in Contemporary Fiction
  • Montana Book Award Honor Book
  • With the quiet precision of Jane Smiley’s
  • A Thousand Acres
  • and the technical clarity of Mary Roach’s
  • Stiff
  • , this is a novel about a young woman who comes most alive while working in her father’s mortuary in a small, forgotten Western town.
  • "The dead come to me vulnerable, sharing their stories and secrets . . . "
  • Mary Crampton has spent all of her thirty years in Petroleum, a small Western town once supported by a powerful grain company. Living at home, she works as the embalmer in her father’s mortuary: an unlikely job that has long marked her as an outsider. Yet, to Mary there is a satisfying art to positioning and styling each body to capture the essence of a subject’s life.
  • Though some townsfolk pretend that the community is thriving, the truth is that Petroleum is crumbling away—a process that began twenty years ago when an accident in the grain elevator killed a beloved high school athlete. The mill closed for good, the train no longer stopped in town, and Robert Golden, the victim’s younger brother, was widely blamed for the tragedy and shipped off to live elsewhere. Now, out of the blue, Robert has returned to care for his terminally ill mother. After Mary—reserved, introspective, and deeply lonely—strikes up an unlikely friendship with him, shocking the locals, she finally begins to consider what might happen if she dared to leave Petroleum.
  • Set in the American West,
  • The Flicker of Old Dreams
  • explores themes of resilience, redemption, and loyalty in prose as lyrical as it is powerful.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(173)
★★★★
25%
(144)
★★★
15%
(87)
★★
7%
(40)
23%
(133)

Most Helpful Reviews

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This is a love song,

Flicker of Old Dreams by Susan Henderson

This is a love song, a dirge, and an elegy for a place that is no more. It is a lament for a town and its people who can no longer live and compete in the larger world. It is a poem about the Montana plains, all of its creatures, topography and climate filled with hardness and stark beauty. It is a call to those who are shackled by fear. But, most of all, this book is reminder that change no matter how hard—and the heroine, a child of trauma, whose sole parent is emotionally unavailable, has it hard—is possible if we look beyond external appearances and give ourselves permission to let go.

Reading this was like riding a rollercoaster: thrilling, jarring, terrifying and had me gripping imaginary hand rails in case I got thrown off. The book awakened many emotions as I read and the more I read I realized that the author had me firmly in hand and all I had to do was to trust her to lead me to the story.

She did. Flicker of Old Dreams is dreamily beautiful and a brilliantly executed book. It soars.

Lucinda Kempe
27 people found this helpful
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and love. And

Susan Henderson’s stunning new novel The Flicker of Old Dreams thoughtfully explores themes of redemption, forgiveness, resilience, and love. And, true to it’s title, asks whether it’s ever too late to pursue one’s dreams. Years ago, a terrible accident shut down the mill in Petroleum, and as a result, the small midwestern town has been slowly dying out. The residents of Petroleum turned their desperate, misplaced anger on the victim’s brother, Robert Golden, who left town soon after the accident. Still an outcast, he returns home to care for his terminally ill mother and is befriended by the local mortician, Mary Crampton. Herself an outsider, Mary is drawn to Robert, and for the first time in her life she considers leaving her home in pursuit of her long-buried dreams. Susan Henderson captures the essence of life in rural America with stunning imagery, lyric prose, and depth of feeling.
8 people found this helpful
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Beautiful imagery

This book was so beautifully written. The descriptions of the landscapes are so vivid and visceral that you really feel like you are there. Some parts of it were difficult for me to get through because I recently lost someone very close to me. BUT the reason those scenes were hard for me was because they were so beautifully written. The way the author handled Mary and the way she viewed the bodies and the souls who inhabited them was so lovely. I also loved that while it was a man who helped her come out of her shell, it never became a romance novel! Obviously she was attracted to him, but what their relationship did was help her to find the strength in herself rather than relying on him to save her. LOVE THAT!!! The larger metaphor for the slow death of small town America is heart breaking, but also a beautiful tribute to the salt of the earth people who inhabit that world. As someone who grew up in a very small, rural town I very much appreciate the care and respect the author showed those characters. Thank you for giving me a wonderful escape that actually helped me to process some of my feelings about losing someone close to me.
4 people found this helpful
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Breathtaking

Others here have already summarized the storyline. So let me add this. Buy this book immediately.
The writing is breathtaking.
The characters are unique and memorable.
The dialogue is poetic, strong and powerful.
There are lines throughout that you will highlight and memorize.
Days...no, weeks after reading it, this book, and its characters, will stay with you. You won’t be able to stop thinking about it.
What an extraordinary read. Brava, Ms. Henderson.
4 people found this helpful
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Wonderful writing about very complex subjects.

A Flicker of Old Dreams by Susan Henderson.

This story is about a young woman who yearns to leave a dying town and find her dreams. What sparks her final decision is a relationship with a complicated man who left town at the age of fourteen. He's riddled with guilt and confusion resulting from a tragic mistake that killed his brother and led to the closing of a business that had kept the dying town limping along. The boy’s character was so tarnished, he was forced to escape and find a home elsewhere. While judgement usually languishes with intimacy and relationship building, the boy’s disappearance instead contributes to imagined actions, imagined darkness, all exacerbating anger and resentment. Memory is altered; character is permanently stained.

When the man returns to town to sit with his dying mother and manage her funeral, the daughter (the narrator of the book) of a funeral director and town embalmer, becomes intrigued. She, too, is an outsider, but one without his scars and drama. She now is the only friend this man has during his grief.

But the story is about so much more than a development of a complex relationship. It’s also more than a story about a lonely young woman who yearns to escape a suffocating town and open up her eyes and life.

Susan Henderson has succeeded in developing one of the most unique characters I have ever read—death-- and in her development of death, she teaches us about intimacy and yearning for life. She writes beautifully about types of death. Death of a town when industry leaves. Death of a childhood when a tragedy kills innocence. Death of our soul, our humanity, when we suffer and blame. But it is the death of the human body where she really excels. It is here, with this amazing metaphor development, the book is lifted to a different level, from a good, entertaining story to extraordinary, insightful poetry.

This past year, I embalmed Jenny Johnson, one of my high school classmates, and we never got along so well as the day I fixed her hair with rollers and painted her nails crimson, like he school’s colors.

Intimacy for this lonely person is achieved in her care and compassion for the body devoid of life. Details of attempts to restore life to the dead body are simply amazing. And throughout the entire novel, every inch of it, the writing is filled with smart observations that bring us closer to loneliness—which of course is a part of all death.

Sometimes I feel like we get along best when I tell only pieces of the truth.

All my life, I have learned the lesson that closeness is tangled up with rejection and shame.

…”Sometimes that’s a lonely place to be, and yet, you don’t really want to be on the inside, either, where you feel pressure to be someone you’re not.”

And on and on. I could quote and quote this book. It is filled with treasures. I am so sorry I got around to it this late, but maybe there are people out there who have not found it yet.

As I said, I loved Up from the Blue too. This is a different book, but it has the familiar, strong writing voice-- centered in details, filled with compassion and intimacy, always displaying competent understanding of the importance of place, and of course anchored in poetry of written word. That’s Susan Henderson.
2 people found this helpful
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Small town America painted with a deft brush

I've been waiting for Henderson's second book since falling in love with her debut novel, Up From the Blue, and The Flicker of Old Dreams did not disappoint. A fascinating look at the demise of a small - and I mean really small - Midwestern town coupled with the intriguing minutia of the mortuary business may not sound like the platform for lyrical prose, and yet it is. The author's poetry background serves up gems for you to discover that decorate this bittersweet tale. And as was true with Up From the Blue, she is particularly skilled in the realm of her child characters - their games, their perceptions, their inner lives. Please let her next book arrive soon!
2 people found this helpful
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A Must Read!

I am a huge Susan Henderson fan. Loved her first novel, Up From the Blue, and was thrilled when The Flicker of Old Dreams released (I think I pre-ordered it I was so excited). This novel is even more amazing than the first. Lush lines that are so honest and true. And I fell in love with her characters and all of their beautiful flaws. I highly recommend this one.
2 people found this helpful
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A Must Read!

I am a huge Susan Henderson fan. Loved her first novel, Up From the Blue, and was thrilled when The Flicker of Old Dreams released (I think I pre-ordered it I was so excited). This novel is even more amazing than the first. Lush lines that are so honest and true. And I fell in love with her characters and all of their beautiful flaws. I highly recommend this one.
2 people found this helpful
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Steeped in Tragedy and Laced with Hope...

Have you ever felt like an outsider in your own home town? Alone. Apart. Disconnected. Even though you were born and raised there… you are never really a part of the mainstream of its daily life. Simply because in many ways, you are different. Not like the others… A stranger in a familiar land… Longing to be somewhere else, doing something… different.
This is exactly how Mary Crampton, the main character in "The Flicker of Old Dreams" by Susan Henderson, feels, living with her father, the local mortician, in the small, desolate western town of Petroleum. Somewhere other there in the back boonies of Montana.
The forgotten town of Petroleum has hummed quietly along for years. Its 180 or so residents eke out a living from the mill that threshes wheat and corn grown on the surrounding farmland. The train comes daily to haul the grain away. Like clockwork. Like the steady beating of a heart… Drumming on and drumming on… Until there is a fatal accident in which young Eddie Golden falls into the mill tower and is smothered. The heart stops. The mill is forced to close. And like her father’s clients in the basement, the town dies.
Growing up amid broken rhythms and patterns of life in a dead, forgotten town, Mary is caught up in the futility of living. Not only does she feel desolate, she feels dead inside. Feeling alive only when working in the mortuary. Her closest companions, friends, the corpses of her once living neighbors.
I know this sounds a bit gruesome. It is. The novel, while superbly simply written – as stark and naked as the landscape in which it is set – contains disturbing graphics that will keep the faint of heart awake at night. But if you can stomach and look beyond them, there is a rich, rewarding story steeped in tragedy and laced with hope.
When Robert, Eddie’s younger brother comes home to take care of his ailing mother, Mary discovers in herself an unfamiliar feeling of energy and renewal. She begins to develop confidence; asserting herself to her father, backing away from his controlling influences on her life. Slowly unraveling the bounds that tie her to him until, until, with the bounds slowly breaking… Mary starts to set herself free…
This is not the type of novel that I would voluntarily pick out for myself. But since it came in a packet of books from my favorite publicist at HarperCollins, I felt compelled to read it. And while I cringed at the stark descriptions that Mary’s job entailed, I was drawn into its pages, captivated by the writing. This is Henderson’s second novel and it is evident that she has honed her craft to a science. Her sparse, succinct style is similar to that of Ernest Hemingway or even Lisa Scottoline, whose modern-day mysteries I have come to immensely enjoy. And yes, the author does not disappoint, lacing her narrative with compelling moving passages that are rift with insightful erudite overtones that are the hallmarks of good, enlightening literature.
Enjoy the read!
2 people found this helpful
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A heartfelt look at death and life

Susan Henderson has again crafted an engaging world that comes alive through the suffering of a young woman. Here we meet Mary, whose life in Petroleum Montana is hemmed in by her limited opportunities. She is a prisoner in a prison whose walls are the horizon itself but it's no less a tragedy. Through her, we see how death stalks this place: we begin with the death of a young man, and how that incident leads to the death of the town itself, as the residents die off without being replaced and Mary and her father bury them, for they are the town's morticians. And then hope comes to Mary in the form of a former resident who returns to prepare for the death of his mother.

I found it fascinating to see how these different forms of death intertwined: the demise of a place, the deaths of the residents, the extinction of hope. Henderson manages this without it seeming maudlin or depressing, which is quite an accomplishment. In so doing, she allowed me to discover as well the emotions and experiences of those who live in the small-town rural West, which was quite an eye-opener. And as was evident in her first novel, "Up From the Blue", as well as her short fiction, she is a master of character. Every one of the people in this book are unique, alive, and complex. Bravo!
1 people found this helpful