Universal Harvester: A Novel
Universal Harvester: A Novel book cover

Universal Harvester: A Novel

Hardcover – February 7, 2017

Price
$24.00
Format
Hardcover
Pages
224
Publisher
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0374282103
Dimensions
5.77 x 0.84 x 8.43 inches

Description

An Amazon Best Book of February 2017: In Nevada, Iowa, in the late 90s, someone is splicing creepy home footage into the videocassettes rented from the Video Hut. You might be enjoying a Boris Karloff classic with some popcorn when the narrative is disconcertingly interrupted by a few moments of someone breathing heavily in the dark, or maybe something more sinister waits for viewers of She’s All That . And despite obvious reservations, Jeremy, treading water as a clerk following his mother’s sudden death years earlier, can’t stop watching. A few of the clips seem to betray local landmarks, and what self-respecting meddling kid could resist checking it out? This may sound like the set-up for a good thriller, but Universal Harvester is much stranger than that. Darnielle – whose unorthodox debut novel, Wolf in White Van , was nominated for the National Book Award – has written an understated slow burn of a book, lean on plot but dense in mood and dread. Darnielle is more interested in what ferments in the dark corners of our universal experiences – how we cope with loss and absence and the ways that they bend us, the peculiar ways we become bent. In fact, if ambiguity isn’t your thing, you might look elsewhere. People might be filming unnerving things in dilapidated, farm country outbuildings, but the pat, Psycho -style explanation is not forthcoming. Universal Harvester is like a David Lynch adaptation of a Marilynne Robinson novel, where manicured grass is replaced by fields of corn, but the bugs squirming beneath are the same. --Jon Foro, The Amazon Book Review " Brilliant …Darnielle is a master at building suspense, and his writing is propulsive and urgent; it's nearly impossible to stop reading . . . [ Universal Harvester is] beyond worthwhile; it's a major work by an author who is quickly becoming one of the brightest stars in American fiction ." ―Michael Schaub, Los Angeles Times “Grows in menace as the pages stack up . . . [But] more sensitive than one would expect from a more traditional tale of dread.”―Joe Hill, New York Times Book Review “The most unsettling book I’ve read since House of Leaves .” ―Adam Morgan, Electric Literature "This chilling literary thriller follows a video store clerk as he deciphers a macabre mystery through clues scattered among the tapes his customers rent. A page-tuning homage to In Cold Blood and The Ring. " ―O: The Oprah Magazine “A stellar encore after the success of [Darnielle's] debut novel, Wolf in White Van . . . Beneath the eerie gauze of this book, I felt an undercurrent of humanity and hope. ”―Manuel Roig-Franzia, The Washington Post “[ Universal Harvester is] so wonderfully strange, almost Lynchian in its juxtaposition of the banal and the creepy , that my urge to know what the hell was going on caused me to go full throttle . . . [But] Darnielle hides so much beautiful commentary in the book’s quieter moments that you would be remiss not to slow down.”―Abram Scharf, MTV News "Few books in recent memory have mastered the Midwestern uncanny as well as John Darnielle’s strange and lyrical Universal Harvester... Like Midwestern cornfields, this book haunts in many ways." ―Chicago Review of Books “ Universal Harvester is a novel about noticing hidden things, particularly the hurt and desperation that people bear under their exterior of polite reserve . . . Mr. Darnielle possesses the clairvoyant’s gift for looking beneath the surface. ”―Sam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal “[ Universal Harvester is] constantly unnerving, wrapped in a depressed dread that haunts every passage. But it all pays off with surprising emotionality. ” ―Kevin Nguyen, GQ.com " Truly excellent... In an age of puffed up literary doorstops, it feels vaguely miraculous that Darnielle manages to pack this haunting novel...into less than 300 pages."―Joe Gross, Austin American-Statesman “Darnielle writes beautifully . . . He builds a deep sense of foreboding by giving pieces of the puzzle in such a way that you really can’t see the solution until that final piece is in place .” ―Salem Macknee, News & Observer "Eerie . . . unnerving . . . Darnielle adeptly juggles multiple stories that collide with chaotic consequences somewhere in the middle of nowhere. With a nod to urban legends and friend-of-a-friend tales, the author prepares readers for the surreal truth, the improbable events that 'have form, and shape, and weight, and meaning" ― Publishers Weekly (starred review) “Darnielle’s masterfully disturbing follow-up to the National Book Award-nominated Wolf in White Van reads like several Twilight Zone scripts cut together by a poet . . . All the while, [Darnielle’s] grasp of the Iowan composure-above-all mindset instills the book with agonizing heartbreak.” ―Daniel Kraus, Booklist (starred review) “Darnielle’s second novel opens like a dark suspense story . . . but he ultimately pursues a softer and more nuanced exploration of family and loss . . . Darnielle’s prose is consistently graceful and empathetic . . . [ Universal Harvester is] a smart and rangy yarn.” ― Kirkus Reviews John Darnielle ’s first novel, Wolf in White Van , was a New York Times bestseller, National Book Award nominee, and a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for first fiction, and widely hailed as one of the best novels of the year. He is the writer, composer, guitarist, and vocalist for the band the Mountain Goats. He lives in Durham, North Carolina, with his wife and sons. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • New York Times
  • Bestseller
  • "A
  • moving, beautifully etched
  • picture of America’s lost and profoundly lonely." ―Kazuo Ishiguro, author of
  • The Remains of the Day
  • and winner of the 2017 Nobel Prize for Literature
  • “Brilliant
  • . . . Darnielle is a master at building suspense, and his writing is propulsive and urgent;
  • it’s nearly impossible to stop reading
  • . . . [
  • Universal Harvester
  • is] beyond worthwhile; it’s a major work by an author who is quickly becoming
  • one of the brightest stars in American fiction
  • .
  • ―Michael Schaub,
  • Los Angeles Times
  • Grows in menace as the pages stack up
  • . . . [But] more sensitive than one would expect from a more traditional tale of dread.”―Joe Hill,
  • New York Times Book Review
  • Life in a small town takes a dark turn when mysterious footage begins appearing on VHS cassettes at the local Video Hut
  • . So begins
  • Universal Harvester
  • , t
  • he haunting and masterfully unsettling new novel from John Darnielle, author of the
  • New York Times
  • Bestseller and National Book Award Nominee
  • Wolf in White Van
  • Jeremy works at the Video Hut in Nevada, Iowa. It’s a small town in the center of the state―the first
  • a
  • in Nevada pronounced
  • ay
  • . This is the late 1990s, and even if the Hollywood Video in Ames poses an existential threat to Video Hut, there are still regular customers, a rush in the late afternoon. It’s good enough for Jeremy: it’s a job, quiet and predictable, and it gets him out of the house, where he lives with his dad and where they both try to avoid missing Mom, who died six years ago in a car wreck.
  • But when a local schoolteacher comes in to return her copy of
  • Targets
  • ―an old movie, starring Boris Karloff, one Jeremy himself had ordered for the store―she has an odd complaint: “There’s something on it,” she says, but doesn’t elaborate. Two days later, a different customer returns a different tape, a new release, and says it’s not defective, exactly, but altered: “There’s another movie on this tape.”
  • Jeremy doesn’t want to be curious, but he brings the movies home to take a look. And, indeed, in the middle of each movie, the screen blinks dark for a moment and the movie is replaced by a few minutes of jagged, poorly lit home video. The scenes are odd and sometimes violent, dark, and deeply disquieting. There are no identifiable faces, no dialogue or explanation―the first video has just the faint sound of someone breathing― but there are some recognizable landmarks. These have been shot just outside of town.
  • In
  • Universal Harvester
  • , the once placid Iowa fields and farmhouses now sinister and imbued with loss and instability and profound foreboding. The novel will take Jeremy and those around him deeper into this landscape than they have ever expected to go. They will become part of a story that unfolds years into the past and years into the future, part of an impossible search for something someone once lost that they would do anything to regain.
  • “This chilling literary thriller follows a video store clerk as he deciphers a macabre mystery through clues scattered among the tapes his customers rent.
  • A page-tuning homage to
  • In Cold Blood
  • and
  • The Ring.
  • ―O: The Oprah Magazine
  • “[
  • Universal Harvester
  • is] so wonderfully strange, almost Lynchian in its juxtaposition of the banal and the creepy, that my urge to know what the hell was going on caused me to go full throttle . . . [But] Darnielle hides so much beautiful commentary in the book’s quieter moments that you would be remiss not to slow down.”―Abram Scharf, MTV News
  • Universal Harvester
  • is a novel about noticing hidden things, particularly the hurt and desperation that people bear under their exterior of polite reserve . . . Mr. Darnielle possesses the clairvoyant’s gift for looking beneath the surface.”―Sam Sacks,
  • The Wall Street Journal
  • “[
  • Universal Harvester
  • is] constantly unnerving, wrapped in a depressed dread that haunts every passage. But it all pays off with surprising emotionality.” ―Kevin Nguyen, GQ.com

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(413)
★★★★
20%
(275)
★★★
15%
(207)
★★
7%
(96)
28%
(386)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

An emotional and impactful story of life in the midwest

This book is being marketed as a horror novel with a lot of emphasis on the mystery of the video tapes. I understand that we need a hook and a description for a book, but I think the marketing ultimately sells this book short and sets up an expectation that might not be met. I loved this book, as I have Darnielle's two other books. They have all impacted me on a deep emotional level, they are strange but very familiar.
For me, this was not a horror novel. If it is then the monster is one of loss and grief and confusion. It is a monster that ultimately we must all face alone. This is a novel about the midwest where the seasons mark time in growth, death, decay, and isolation. These are small towns without the ready distraction of bigger cities, places where one is never far from having to contemplate mortality and existence among the hardly uninterrupted expanses of fields and county roads. People seek all kinds of escape there and those that love them are left with the consequences of the escape. Sometimes we ignore what occurs, and sometimes the damage never leaves us.
If one wants the mysteries solved, then the seeds of explanation are there in the final section if one pays attention, but let us not forget that the universal harvester is death.
54 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

There are many variations of your story

There isn't much to say here-- whatever path brought you to this page, at this hour, on this day, was a path traced out long before this moment, long even before you were born.

Perhaps you have never heard of John Darnielle, but you saw a piece on this book in the New Yorker, or you saw it rising in the Amazon best seller charts, or, on your commute this morning, you heard, from the open window of a passing car, a single sentence of an audiobook that played over and over in your mind, that haunted your ride, until you got to work and googled it and determined that it belonged to this book.

Or perhaps you read Wolf in White Van, the National Book Award nominated novel about a man who, in his youth, was severely disfigured, and who now, confronted with another moment of extreme violence, tries to come to some understanding of his history and of the world-- and if understanding cannot be had, at least to some measure of joy. You laughed, with that novel, though not often. More typically, you cried. You chant sometimes "Nevada-- Oregon-- Washington-- Oregon-- Nevada-- Utah-- Colorado-- Kansas" and you see rising above you the Trace Italiane and though you know that you will never penetrate its mysteries you still, in its shadow, find peace.

Or perhaps you listen to the Mountain Goats, you routinely pump your first joyfully in the air to the sounds of "This Year," and "Up the Wolves," and "Sax Rohmer #1," and "Heretic Pride," and "The Pigs Who Ran Straight Away Into the Water and Their Great Triump" and "Psalms 40: 2" and "The Ballad of Chavo Guerrero" and "The Best Ever Death Metal Band Out of Denton" and "Prowl Great Cain" and, of course, "No Children," but not "Going to Georgia," and you certainly never, when you've finally made it to see The Mountain Goats live, shouted to Darnielle a request to play that song, for you know that he is not the kind of person who can identify with the man in that song any more-- but the other songs, yea, they have become the very background music of your life, their choruses are your choruses, their verses your verses, and you cannot remember a time before this was the case.

These variables matter not, in the end. Regardless of your history with John Darnielle, whether that name conjures up music or star forts or nothing at all, you are here now, and your choice is not whether or not you should buy this book-- because it is one of those books that any person can enter and one of those books in which any person may become totally, utterly lost-- but only whether or not you can afford the audiobook, where Darnielle's reading adds both a meter and a quiet menace to his words.

If you must know something about the book, about its contents: it concerns, above all else, loss. It follows individuals who have lost people and, in Darnielle's words, reshaped their lives around the gaps. It concerns the things which can crawl into gaps. It concerns wasps swarming an under-defended birdnest. It concerns a woman who cannot help but watch them fly. It concerns a video rental store whose wares have been edited to contain brief glimpses of grotesque realities. It concerns spies and signs and cults and Iowa and apophatic ways to divinity and the unbearable stillness, the muffled quietness, the helpless isolation that one comes to in the middle of an endless field of corn.
21 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

TOO TOUGH A ROW TO HOE!

I really wanted to like John Darnielle's second novel, UNIVERSAL HARVESTER. After all, who wouldn't be intrigued by a plot involving snippets of disturbing home movies embedded in other VHS films. Unfortunately, this book never really resolved that plot thread and the narrative really veered all over the place until this reader (apparently many others, as well) became so confused that he skimmed over the middle portion of the tale just to get to the end and some sort of resolution. But, no dice. Maybe I missed something... The story may have been moody and atmospheric as the protagonist and his father try hard to deal with the recent violent death of their mother/wife, but the plot was so convoluted I can't remember if anything positive happens to either of them by story's end. Sorry, can't recommend this tale!
13 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Don't. Just read something else.

Ughhhh. I hate to say I hated a book. But I really was so disappointed. I was so intrigued the first 1/3 of this book and then it got so confusing and so boring and completely complicated for what ends up being no f-ing reason. I read a lot but feel like I either missed the entire meaning to this book or it sucks as bad as I think it does. The story had so much potential but feels like halfway through writing the author decided to take a bunch of ketamine and lose his mind, writing what he saw on his trip. Luckily I read it on a plane and didn't waste any of my free time reading this.
11 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Very easy to get into but prepare for disappointment

I enjoyed the writing style overall but a lot of things made no sense even after rereading them several times I didn't understand what was going on. The story was framed well but the ending is absolutely horrible I wish I never even read it because of how disappointing the ending was
9 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Interesting idea, but poorly executed

I received an advance copy of this book with an Indiespensable shipment a while back. Upon seeing the unique packaging and reading the blurb on the back, I was really excited to read it. The story sounded creepy and intriguing, so I began reading it right away. Unfortunately, it was neither of those things.

The plot held a lot of promise, but after setting up a spooky situation (odd scenes from apparent home movies are somehow spliced onto video tape rentals), the story veers off to follow different characters. Their actions eventually come together, but those separate storylines by themselves are quite dull. Ultimately, I don't think I really had a sense of who any of the characters were or why they were doing what they were doing. Their choices often seemed odd and unbelievable. At the end of the book, when all of the threads were woven together, I found myself thinking two things: "Yeah, right," and "So what?" The big reveal fell quite flat and the separate storylines felt forced together.

The only thing that could have saved a book like this would have been especially beautiful writing that I could admire independently of the plot and characters it was attached to. This book didn't have that either.
9 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Possibly the worst novel I've ever read

Possibly the worst novel I've ever read. I wouldn't even donate it to my local charity bookshop, thus sparing an innocent from this waste.
The author should have stuck to rock . I'll never believe a New York Times book review again.
8 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

SMALL TOWNS IN IOWA

This book is Amazon's Best Book of February 2017. The book begins back when small video stores were popular. The story is set in a small central Iowa town name,Nevada. The protagonist is Jeremy Heldt who works as a clerk in the video store. He is twenty-two years old. His father and friends tell him he should look for a better job. This job is o.k. for a student, but he is a young man and should be looking to get ahead. But Jeremy is satisfied with his life as it is. Jeremy and father, Steve, spend a lot of time together. Linda Heldt, the wife and mother, was killed in an automobile accident six years ago on an icy, dark road. Father and son miss her. The two make it a point to always have supper together.

Suddenly characters return videos commenting on how the videos contain strips from somewhere else. Tiny sections, blurred seconds of something or someone intrude in the videos. How could this happen? This is weird, beyond strange. Jeremy watches one of the videos. The added section sticks in his mind and he cannot sleep. He feels haunted by something. The book contains strange descriptions of the land. Tall fields of corn, hiding whatever is behind the corn. Sounds that can't be heard even by those close by. Anything can happen and does, people can get lost and are never found in these landscapes. The countryside is attractive during the day, but when night falls and the dark comes over the land, the area becomes fearful, creepy, weird, frightening. The sounds of night insects and movements of nocturnal creatures.

Mr Darnielle's writing is so different, but I like it and the different way the story is told. Interesting characters tell their life stories. I started reading it not wanting to rush through, then put it aside, then started reading and had to finish it is that good. The book goes back and forth in time, but that's o.k. with me.

Sarah Jane, Jeremy's employer is a good boss, but she disappears, moves in with a friend in an old farmhouse. But why? Employees can't get in touch with her or find her. Stephanie, a teacher, is one who tells Jeremy about the weird strips inserted into the videos and also tells him he should move away from Iowa, have some ambition.

The book is hard to write about but contains some interesting characters and scenes which I like. There is the feeling of loss and abandonment, of being alone, but isn't this true with everyone. This is a state of small towns, cornfields which can be scary at night. The book goes through the seasons, but those long, cold nights are scary. The name sounds like a very large company, and also like the coming of the grim reaper. Steve Heldt has found a lady friend.

I heard about this book on PBS. I like reading new writers, fresh, different, innovative, different ways of telling a story.
8 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Beautifully written but frustrating

I wanted to love this novel. The writing is beautiful and I sincerely hope that Darnielle continues to publish. That said, this novel sets up several plot points at the beginning and then refuses to follow through with them. I wouldn't say that it fails to follow through with them because I think that the ambiguity is a choice here, but it doesn't work. Almost every plot point--character connections, back story, all of it--is left unanswered. And I do appreciate ambiguity; I think it's fine to leave a few questions unanswered but this was almost aggressively passive. I will also acknowledge that maybe there were answers there if you really, really read between the lines--and I do think there are a few of those--but in a longform work, I needed a bit of payoff.
8 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

A complex, beautiful tale of loss and quiet despair

This is a hard book to easily review. The prose is beautiful and the story nuanced in its place and form, while the plot is exposed to the reader in a series of glimpses into the lives of the characters told with a distinct detachment. This detachment, combined with the complexity of the prose, might make some become bored. That said, take the time to really delve into this book and you will likely find something special.
8 people found this helpful