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Thorn Tree

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"Terrifically vivid...Remarkable." --The New York Times Book Review: A beautifully wrought novel on the aftershocks of the heady but dangerous late 1960s and the relationship between trauma and the creative impulse.

Now in his late-sixties, Daniel lives in quiet anonymity in a converted guest cottage in the Hollywood Hills. A legendary artist, he’s known for one seminal work—Thorn Tree—a hulking, welded, scrap metal sculpture that he built in the Mojave desert in the 1970s. The work emerged from tragedy, but building it kept Daniel alive and catapulted him to brief, reluctant fame in the art world.

Daniel is neighbors with Celia, a charismatic but fragile actress. She too experienced youthful fame, hers in a popular television series, but saw her life nearly collapse after a series of bad decisions. Now, a new movie with a notorious director might reignite her career.

A single mother, Celia leaves her young son Dean for weeks at a time with her father, Jack, who stays at her house while she’s on location. Jack and Daniel strike up a tentative friendship as Dean takes to visiting Daniel’s cottage--but something about Jack seems off. Discomfiting, strangely intimate, with flashes of anger balanced by an almost philosophical bent, Jack is not the harmless grandparent he pretends to be.

Weaving the idealism and the darkness of the late 1960s, the glossy surfaces of Los Angeles celebrity today, and thrumming with the sound of the Grateful Dead, the mania of Charles Manson and other cults, and the secrets that both Jack and Daniel have harbored for fifty years, Thorn Tree is an utterly-compelling novel.

400 pages, Hardcover

First published April 16, 2024

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About the author

Max Ludington

3 books35 followers
Max Ludington is the author of two novels, Thorn Tree, and Tiger in a Trance. His fiction has appeared in Tin House, Nerve, Meridian, H.O.W. Journal, and On the Rocks: the KGB Bar Fiction Anthology. He lives in Brooklyn and teaches writing at Pratt Institute.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 68 reviews
Profile Image for Michael Burke.
174 reviews101 followers
April 17, 2024
“Thorn Tree” by Max Ludington captures many wild elements of the sixties, with reverberations still echoing in its characters today. We have colorful acid trips, communes, cults, even the Grateful Dead are here– and set against this psychedelic backdrop we have the trauma of a young girl’s death.

Currently we find Daniel, a once-famous artist who never recovered from the trauma of his girlfriend, Rachel’s death and the prison time he served for his role in that. We are served up his back-story, filled in by numerous jumps back in time. Just out of prison, he stumbles onto a remote bunkhouse and barn in the Mojave Desert, where he throws himself into constructing a huge tree sculpture of metal, the Thorn Tree. Never intending for anyone to see this art, it expresses the devastation he feels for the night he lost Rachel. Eventually people flock to this piece, drawn by an unwelcome article in the L.A. Weekly. Notoriety arrives– peace does not.

Another major player in this book is Celia Dressler, a struggling actress who has been through rehab and is seeing her career back on the upswing. Often away filming on location, she lives just up the hill from Daniel and only takes an interest in him when she finds her six-year-old son, Dean, has been inviting himself over to this stranger’s house when not being supervised by her father.

Celia’s father, Jack, is the wildcard here. For some inexplicable reason he wants to be Daniel’s best buddy and his tormentor. While we are taken with the histories of both Daniel and Celia, the more we find out about Jack, the more repulsed we are.

Unfortunately, too many different characters are introduced, particularly toward the final portion of the book. A whole cult sub-plot expands and some of the major people drift away for too long. It is reminiscent of the part of a DVD where the director explains why certain scenes and performances were cut, just slowing things down or not being able to be fully realized within the confines of the plot.

The major characters were riveting. Daniel’s complicated story was intriguing. Celia’s romantic relationship with her driver brought out some honest conversations exposing intense emotions. Even the devil, Jack, uncovered a surprisingly tender side with the love of his grandson. There seemed to be too many loose ends, however, and I felt the book’s momentum was lost by the swollen final direction taken.

Thank you to St. Martin’s Press and NetGalley for providing an advance reader copy in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Beth Deese.
108 reviews2 followers
September 10, 2023
Thorn Tree
Max Ludington

If the word “foreboding” was described by a single book, this would be the book! There is a dark ominous vibe from start to finish that kinda creeped me out but also sparked my curiosity. Usually I would call that suspense, but this was more like a muggy fug of impending doom that you are running towards in slow motion.

So that actually sounds like a nightmare and yeah, it does have a bit of that dissociative mindbending feel, especially when the author starts describing some of the weird theories a group of his characters embrace (more to come on that in a minute!). But it’s also a masterful building of tension that happens throughout the read that kept me flipping those pages fascinated by how this wild ride could possibly finish. Ludington’s writing style definitely engaged me and I didn’t want to put it down.

We meet Daniel in current day California and the timeline jumps back and forth between his past, starting in the no holds barred 60s, and his present reality. In the present, he is a man who has lived his life in the wake of a tragic incident which is a story that slowly unfolds for us with forays back into time. This incident has infiltrated all his relationships and life choices in the following years, turning him from a boy with life at his feet to an old man with a suitcase full of regrets. But there are things he also doesn’t know, missing facts that could have and maybe still will change everything. The structure of the story is anything but straightforward but it’s a puzzle I enjoyed figuring out.

One of Ludington strengths in this book is how he creates powerful and very realistic characters, full of flaws and relatable emotions. Their storylines, like Celia and Dean who the story opens with, develop extensively and exist almost independently of Daniel’s. Yet oddly his is the only story that has a beginning, middle and end. By the end, everyone else feels unresolved and relegated to the periphery like they didn’t matter so much, even though Ludington detailed their lives and thoughts with vivid contour from the start. I was highly annoyed to not get full stories about each and every person. Like, excuse me, sir, but don’t make me get involved with your characters and then leave me hanging! It’s an open-ended treatment that maybe could be said to create mystery and drama but for me felt unsatisfying.

But back to the foreboding part, the subject matter is part of what gives this book such a weird vibe. The other major character, Jack has some strange experiences with a cult and there are often extensive breakdowns of the cult’s mystic beliefs and supernatural philosophies. Sometimes it doesn’t even feel like just the cult’s view but perhaps the author’s and you start to wonder if maybe the villain has a valid point despite some of his more questionable choices. It takes a skilled writer to make a villain still somehow relatable. Ludington definitely played with my mind a little bit here!

All said and done, this book won’t be a cookie cutter read and will stimulate your brain cells, which is always intriguing. It kept me thinking beyond the pages and I value that in a book! You probably won’t put this one down with the elation that comes with a nice tidy ending and a storybook high but I think you’ll find it worth the read!

*I was graciously provided an ARC to review by St Martin’s press in exchange for my honest opinion.
Profile Image for Cat.
506 reviews23 followers
March 8, 2024
I really dread giving a 3-star rating. I know the author and publishing company have all worked very hard to get a novel to the review stage. But we’re supposed to be honest, so here goes.
I tried so hard to get into this novel. It has all the required points: interesting characters, a plot that goes back years, and a beautiful landscape for the stage. But I kept losing the string we’re supposed to pull ourselves along with; the thought, the main backbone, the deepening plot. I feel sure this is unique with me and others will enjoy the story, so please give it a try. I am sorry, but I just couldn’t get there.
Thanks so much to St. Martin’s Press for an ARC in exchange for my honest review. The publishing date is April 16, 2024.
Profile Image for Sherry Chiger.
Author 3 books11 followers
January 19, 2024
Rounded up from 2.5 stars.

Why did "Thorn Tree" disappoint and even anger me so?

1) The descriptions of the characters' thoughts reminded me of technical writing: every detail spelled out, in language much more elevated than it needed to be. This is a book that uses "gravid" instead of "pregnant." Characters of very different backgrounds and education levels have their thoughts and feelings parsed in the same manner, with the exception of the seven-year-old boy.
2) Nobody speaks the way these characters do. So many philosophical debates. So much naval-gazing.
3) The female character who is at the heart of the characters' motivation is not just a tabula rasa but also an impossible creation, a paragon of femaleness that every man who gazes upon her cannot help but treasure.
4) Characters are introduced with abandon, for what seems to be little reason.

Some of the writing was lovely and evocative, and the depiction of the young boy spot-on. But overall, finishing this was a chore. Maybe I'm just not the book's target audience.

Thank you, NetGalley and St. Martin's Press, for providing me with an advance copy in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Chrissie.
1,076 reviews68 followers
April 9, 2024
4.5 stars

Daniel Tunison, a reclusive artist now in his late sixties, lives in a quietly appointed former guest cottage in Hollywood Hills. Known for one briefly monumental and massive sculpture, Thorn Tree, that he constructed from scrap metal in the Mojave desert in the 1970s, Daniel is haunted by past tragedy and a lifetime of mistakes made along the way.

Daniel's neighbor is Celia Dressler, a fragile actress hoping for a career resurgence following her own series of personal setbacks. While Celia is away filming a movie, she entrusts the care of her young son, Dean, to her enigmatic father, Jack, who has been living with them. As Dean befriends Daniel, Jack's increasingly unsettling presence leaves Daniel feeling hesitant and wary as he gets glimpses of another man lurking just beneath the surface. As Ludington begins filling in both Daniel's and Jack's pasts, we discover hidden depths and long-held secrets in the gritty and tumultuous scene of late 1960s Los Angeles.

Thorn Tree is a masterful piece of gorgeously constructed literary fiction from new-to-me author, Max Ludington. Filled with interesting characters, the pull of Thorn Tree was not only discovering more about the burgeoning story, but also in spending time learning about Daniel, the backbone of the novel. From the first page, the depth and care in the creation of Daniel was evident. The allure of Thorn Tree is an increasingly tension-filled tale and the convergence of the past timeline and the present, unfolding in degrees so subtle that I gasped out loud at one part. Before I knew it, the book simply became unputdownable.

I received this book for free from the publisher via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. This affected neither my opinion of the book nor the content of my review.
460 reviews9 followers
April 16, 2024
Thorn Tree by Max Ludington is a puzzling novel, difficult to categorize.
On the one hand, it is partly a meandering tale of experiences in the counterculture of California during the 1960s and 70s, with scenes involving drug use and abuse, music, and commune life. But it is also a character study of a complicated man, Daniel, age 68, who has lived a lifetime of personal tragedy, love lost, brushes with the law, and prison time. He tends to self-isolate, and now, in 2017, is retired and living alone in a rented guest house in Beverly Hills. The residents of the main house are a famous beautiful young actress Celia, her 6 year old son Dean, and her irascible father Jack.
Told in two timelines—past--1968 onward—and present—2017—the story wanders through their lives, told in long chapters and a stream of consciousness writing style. There are many words and long-winded descriptions of places and events.
I found most of the characters to be unlikeable, as they are generally unscrupulous and self-serving. They wallow in introspection and retrospection, and it is hard to feel a connection or sympathy for them and their unfortunate or downright unpleasant life choices. I did like Dean, the young boy, who is amazingly unspoiled in spite of all the damaged adults in his life.
The plot is decent, but again is not well-served by the very long chapters and philosophical ramblings. I did guess the story’s twist early on, and I think the ending is touching, and very much in keeping with the general tone of the story.
I really wanted to like this ARC, since I requested it in part because I lived the 60s and 70s in this milieu of experimentation and counterculture. But the lack of focus and rambling writing left me wanting tighter plotting and focused storytelling, and less hand-wringing by the main characters.
While this is a “miss” for me, I appreciate Ludington’s writing skill and imagination. I would definitely give his future novels consideration.

Thank you to St. Martin’s Press and NetGalley for the ARC. This is my honest review.
Profile Image for Jackie Sunday.
553 reviews30 followers
December 24, 2023
A sculpture is admired by the top art critics. It’s a thorn tree made from scrap pieces of metal with wild limbs in all directions. It has taken on a new meaning with this intriguing plot – one that you may find exciting and unusual.

The grandiose tree takes on a path of its own from the creator, Daniel, who remembered the love he had with his girlfriend, Rachel. This was the last place they were sitting together peacefully just south of Santa Cruz on one of the cliffs above the ocean. Rachel left to take a walk and when he woke up from a deep sleep, everything changed.

Life events can be unpredictable and this book is a prime example of how it can unravel when you think you have complete control of what’s ahead. We may meet someone who seems so familiar as described in the book -- like a reincarnated soul – and we try to make sense of it.

Max Ludington takes us into the drug scene of the late 60s with hippies living together at a mystical commune in California. For those living during this time, it could bring back some memories of this movement of free-spirited new-age love. I guess you can call this historical fiction for those that have to ask their parents or grandparents what this was all about.

The writing is engaging with a suspenseful plot and yet, the chapters are long without good breaking points. There are two stories that eventually merge into one and everything makes sense but can be confusing at first. Every character is well-thought out with vivid images to like or scorn with disgust. It’s a book like no other and I have a feeling that this story will linger in my head for a long time.

My thanks to St. Martin’s Press and NetGalley for allowing me to read an advanced copy of this book with an expected release date of April 16, 2024.
Profile Image for Leslie Zemeckis.
Author 3 books105 followers
April 1, 2024
About Daniel - an artist in the 1960s and his neighbor an actress who isn’t the best of mothers - and of course a secret long held - a great atmosphere in Hollywood and what was going on and the artists struggles
1,468 reviews34 followers
March 3, 2024

I had a hard time getting into this book as it jumps in time so easily, but once I had the characters straight I really enjoyed it. It involves many characters' Jack, Forest, Dean, Daniel, Celia--and that's just to name a few! It vacillates between the late sixties and the present, so we get scenes of the drug culture and LSD, along with the music world, art and sculpture, and "free love" and hippie cults. So buckle up and enjoy the ride as you may feel transported back to that crazy time when fantasies almost became an every day reality!
Thanks to NetGalley for this ARC!
Profile Image for AndiReads.
1,282 reviews143 followers
July 20, 2023
An exciting three part novel set outside of Hollywood.
Daniel lives a hermit-like life. Once an infamous artist creating massive multimedia sculptures, he now lives a isolated life tutors young students in English in his free time. His actress- neighbor Celia, is recuperating from a second stay at rehab. She has recently been cast in a strenuous movie and is on the cusp of massive stardom. The filming has gone long and she has left her once estranged father Jack to watch her young son Dean.

All of these adults are running from trauma - how it all ties together and the story it makes will simply enthrall you! If you love multi-layered and complex characters and plots that span decades, this is an amazing book for you!
#ThornTree #Maxludington #StMartins
436 reviews
August 29, 2023
Thank you Netgalley and St. Martin’s Press for sharing this new novel. After sitting with it for a few days after finishing, I’m still not sure how to rate this book. I thInk the writing was very good, the plot was engrossing and kept me reading and reading. All good, right? But it also filled me with a weird sense of impending doom or angst right from the beginning. That is not something I typically experience when reading unless I seek out a horror or suspense novel, and I didn’t enjoy it in this book. I think many will but for me, it made me feel stressed out. I also felt disappointed by the way it ended. Characters did not have the resolutions I was hoping for, or in some cases, it was left open ended. Maybe too much like real life?
Profile Image for Nancy.
1,605 reviews399 followers
December 18, 2023
The characters in Thorn Tree came of age in the Sixties with its drugs, sex, and rock and roll–and cults.

There is Daniel, who lost the woman he loved, accused of her murder but only found guilty and jailed for drug possession. After his release, he wandered into the desert and finds a place with an older man. Using junk metal, Daniel constructed a giant tree, the tree he was sitting under when his girlfriend took a walk and never returned. After selling the work, he destroys it, landing again in prison. Now in his sixties, he has a cottage next to a large estate owned by Hollywood star, Celia, who has a son, Dean.

And then there is Jack, who turned up late in his daughter’s life, taking on the role of caregiver grandfather to Dean while Celia is away filming the movie that could propel her career. When Jack is drunk, Dean wanders down to visit Daniel. Daniel is unaware that he has encountered Jack before.

When Jack returns to the philosophy he embraced at a commune in the Sixties, he indoctrinates Dean,an d the tension mounts.

There is murder and sexual abuse, drug use and alcoholism. The dark side of the Sixties leaves its impact on the characters.

Daniel’s creation of the Thorn Tree is beautifully presented. It is my favorite part of the story with its insight into the creative motivation and therapeutic healing behind art. I also enjoyed the character of Dean, who in the end is pivotal.

But the book is dominated by Jack in the later parts, which left me unsure. In the end, the story felt to be more about the impact of the cult on mentally unstable and unhealthy people than about art.

Readers who enjoy books about the Sixties will like this novel. The music of the Grateful Dead plays a part. Celia’s story takes readers into Hollywood and uncomfortable sexual exploitation.

Thanks to the publisher for a free book
Profile Image for Darcia Helle.
Author 28 books722 followers
May 8, 2024
In a word, Thorn Tree is about connections.

Connections to our past deeds, our past selves, family legacies, and one another are the threads that tie this story together.

The story is character-driven. The plot unfolds from the characters’ decisions and the way those decisions play out in their lives. While the storytelling style won’t be for everyone, I loved that about this book.

We have two timelines; California in the late ‘60s and the present. Setting and atmosphere are immersive and evocative, bringing the past alive in ways that unexpectedly connect to the present.

This is a heavy read that’s powerful and thought-provoking, requiring the reader to take time to reflect along the way.

*I received a free copy from St. Martin’s Press.*
Profile Image for Barbara Miller.
58 reviews
April 28, 2024
This book was a four star book until the end. The ending was thoroughly disappointing. Another book where I felt the author just gave up and decided they were done. I invested in the characters. I guess I'll make up my own ending. Thumbs down.
Profile Image for Barbara.
52 reviews
October 3, 2023
Daniel lives in quiet anonymity (just the way he likes it) in a converted guest cottage in the Hollywood Hills. A legendary artist, now in his late sixties, he’s known for one piece - Thorn Tree—a huge, welded, scrap metal sculpture that he built in the Mojave desert in the 1970’s. The work emerged from a tragedy in Daniel’s life but building it kept him alive. He was virtually a hermit and lived with the owner of the scrap yard, Ben who encouraged the ultimate completion of the piece. Soon, people came from all around to see his sculpture and without wanting to, he was pushed into the fame of the art world.
Daniel is neighbors with Celia: she lives in the big house, he in the gatehouse. Celia is an actress, hoping to reignite her career with an off-the-wall director. A single mom, she leaves her six year old son Dean for weeks at a time with her father, Jack while she’s on location. Jack and Daniel strike up a tentative friendship as Dean likes visiting Daniel’s cottage--but something about Jack raises questions in Daniels head. To him, Jack is not the harmless grandparent he pretends to be. 
The story takes place in three parts: the drug induced LSD 1960s, with Grateful Dead concerts and the Charles Manson cult; the glitter of Beverly Hills now and everything in between. Daniel and Jack have lived those years, similar but different. Jack always appeared shady to me and I wasn’t sure where that was going. Daniel had a difficult time in his early adult life but was trying to be the best he could be, struggling with his demons. Together the book revolves around them and their lives.

I enjoyed this book. Growing up in the 60’s, it brought back a lot of memories.
Not a deep read but enjoyable all the same.

Thank you to NetGalley and St Martins Press for the opportunity to read Thorn Tree!
104 reviews6 followers
February 29, 2024
Daniel, a once famous artist, who sought and protects his now quiet life away from the turbulent 60’s, lives in a converted guest cottage owned by a movie star who is intent on re-awakening her flailing career. Her father, Jack, who has a bit of a nefarious past history of his own, lives there, taking care of his young grandson, Daniel can’t warm up to Jack ,who reminds Daniel of a period in his life he would just as soon forget, the reason he’s retreated from the public eye. An explosive twist that this reader didn’t see coming.

Mr. Ludington has delivered a well-written, compelling novel where the past collides with the present and which will stay with you long after reading the last page.

Thank you NetGalley for the opportunity to read this novel pre-publication.
Profile Image for Lee Staes.
56 reviews
December 25, 2023
Thorn Tree is a very well done novel. The author expertly navigates between different time periods and character perspectives, the enduring impact of trauma, and the creativity that drives artists. I would highly recommend this to readers who enjoy delving into the past in order to understand the present, and who can appreciate how and why people make both good and bad choices. The plot kept me interested, wondering what had happened, what was going to happen, and how the characters respond to each other. I enjoyed this book. Growing up in the 60’s, it brought back a lot of memories. My thanks to Netgalley for the advanced copy in exchange for an honest review.
32 reviews1 follower
January 9, 2024
A thriller from start to finish, Thorn Tree starts with foreboding and the tension builds to an unresolved ending. Baby boomers will appreciate and identify with many of the musical and cultural references in the 60's time period. I was engrossed throughout the story but felt betrayed by the cliff hanging conclusion for many of the characters. I turned the page of the last chapter expecting an epilogue that would tie up loose ends.. I exclaimed out loud "What??!!?". Is there a sequel? This would be a five star read for me except for the ending.
16 reviews
December 27, 2023
I can only say WOW! The characters in this book along with the story line were amazing. I got so engrossed in the story, the characters, I feel that I have lived what they lived. I would read anything by this author. The book was really amazing. I am sorry about how some things turned out. A sequel perhaps? WOW, the book was so good.
Profile Image for Read with Me (Jolie).
1,164 reviews40 followers
April 22, 2024
For full review, go here: https://readwithme2018.com/2024/04/22...


I didn’t know what to expect when I started reading Thorn Tree. From the blurb, I was expecting some insight into 1960s drug culture, and well, I don’t know what I was expecting after that. So, I went into reading Thorn Tree with an open mind. I mainly felt neutral toward the book.

The main storyline of Thorn Tree focuses on Daniel, Jack, and Celia. The storylines were well-written but flat. I also had the same feeling with the secondary storylines. They were flat and didn’t add much to the main storyline. Also, in certain parts of the storyline, the storyline is almost fever-dream-like. I also was not a fan of how the author would switch from 2017 to the past without giving a heads-up. It made for a lot of backtracking, which I prefer to avoid.

Out of the four characters, Daniel was the most relatable. Yes, he had some pretty crappy things happen to him. And yes, Daniel did some pretty crappy things, too, but he had turned his life around. He became an educator who valued his students. He was trying to mend fences with his son and reconnect with his ex while helping out her seventeen-year-old son. He was just a good guy overall.

Jack, on the other hand, I detested. From the minute he was introduced in the book, I felt that he was off in a way. And, oh boy, was he. I felt dirty after reading his chapters as if I needed a shower. Like Daniel, he had some crappy things happen to him. But, he took the trauma of those things and let them control him. He did love Dean in his way, and I didn’t doubt that. But, the events in the second half of the book disgusted me.

I did like Celia, but I felt terrible for who she had as a father and what she was being forced to do on set. Unlike Jack, who tried to hide who he was, Celia knew precisely what type of person she was and what kind of person she wanted to be. I wasn’t a big fan of how her relationship with Leo started. But, the conversations that she and Leo had were thought-provoking and soul-searching. I also never doubted her feelings for Dean. She loved her son, and everything she endured on that set was to give him a good life.

I also liked Dean. However, as the book went on and Jack became more interested in his ex-cult (I will explain below), Dean became more damaged. He went from an outgoing, vibrant child to one who shut down to everyone except for Jack, Celia, and Daniel. Jack was sucking the childhood right out of him, and it was painful to watch.

The storyline with Daniel broke my heart. It was interesting to see Daniel evolve into the man he was in 2017. I liked that the author had him trying to rectify past mistakes and express regrets over things he did in the past (the blowing up of his tree, though, was not a regret of his). I was not expecting his storyline to end as it did, and I was a little grumpy about that.

The storyline with Jack was interesting, even though I didn’t like him. The author didn’t even pretend he was a good guy; I liked that he did that. I wish the author had spent more time on Jack’s time in the death cult. It would have explained why he was so fixated on it in 2017 and why he put his grandson through the events that he did.

The storyline with Celia and the one with Dean (up to almost the end of the book, where his storyline became the only one) were fascinating. But they didn’t hold my interest (it was more about Daniel and Jack). That is until the last half of the book. Then Dean’s storyline became very interesting. I am going to repeat what I said above; Jack was sucking away Dean’s childhood. It was so evident by the last chapter, which I can’t go into.

There was a secondary storyline that involved two teenagers (Chris and Hunter) and a pamphlet that contained the works of Jack’s long-dead cult leader. While I didn’t feel that it added any depth to the main or Jack’s storyline, I did find it fascinating to see how Chris got swept up in the whole cult idea. I also found it fascinating that Jack seemingly got swept up, too.

I liked that the author went a little in-depth into the counterculture of the late ’60s. I found those chapters fascinating and wished that the author had spent a little more time there.

The end of Thorn Tree was a bit bland. The author did bring everything together, but I wasn’t happy with any of the outcomes. Jack’s confession to Daniel, while needed, did not need to turn into what it did. Also, I wouldn’t say I liked how the whole Dean storyline ended. I was shaking my head in disbelief and dsiappointment.

Many thanks to St. Martin’s Press, NetGalley, and Max Ludington for allowing me to read and review this ARC of Thorn Tree. All opinions stated in this review are mine.
Profile Image for J Earl.
2,151 reviews96 followers
August 10, 2023
Thorn Tree by Max Ludington is the type of read you can enjoy for the plot, the characters, and/or the nostalgic (or if you're younger, the historic) aspects. Fortunately, all three appealed to me so this was an exceptional novel.

Thinking back to living in the LA area a couple times while growing up (I was a Navy brat and my mother was an LA native, well, Van Nuys) put me there in the late sixties and again in the early 70s, so while I didn't experience it quite like the characters, it did bring back memories, especially in some of the descriptions of terrain or the feel of a gray day. But that wasn't the most appealing part for me.

The plot kept me engaged, wondering what had happened, what was going to happen, and how the characters would respond. I think we were given some subtle insights that built up both the tension and the investment for us as readers. But even the wonderful plot wasn't what grabbed me the most.

It was definitely the characters. I didn't have to like or even approve of everything they did, but I was given the opportunity to understand why they did what they did and what kind of sense it made to them. In many novels, when we try to "figure out" a character, we are only thinking in terms of ways it impacts the plot. Here, for me, I was thinking about them the way I think about people in real life. Not just to understand the big moments but to understand them as humans, which means the small things and the casual habits and/or thoughts. I don't have to like all of them. But I do need to want to understand them, and Ludington made me want to do that.

I would highly recommend this to readers who enjoy going into the past in order to understand the present, and who can appreciate how and why people make choices, both good ones and bad ones. I don't know if some part of my attraction to the characters has to do with a sense of familiarity I felt at times, but I do think it went beyond that, so readers who like character-driven plots should find a lot here to digest.

Reviewed from a copy made available by the publisher via NetGalley.
2,543 reviews20 followers
April 17, 2024
Thorn Tree by Max Ludington is a convoluted story of two men and their offspring and extended families. The timeline jumps around to tell the story in real time. The men are called Daniel and Jack. Daniel is a fabulous character who tried LSD once and it changed his life. Turns out he had a jar of it in his trunk and he went to prison. He had been with a girl who was found dead, but they couldn’t prove he killed it. When he got out of jail he was seriously depressed and walked into the desert, ready to die. He was found by an old guy named Ben, who brought him around and kept him for a while. Ben had a junk yard, now defunct, and Daniel helped him get the remaining stuff to town to sell. Then he began to eye what was left. From it he built a tree, a big tree. He gained a lot of recognition and so he built a couple more. Daniel was so unhappy about the commerciality of it all that he blew two of them up. He went to jail, again, terrorism. Now he was out and he was old. He lived in a cottage and led a peaceful life until a little boy named Dean entered it and brought with him his mother and his grandfather.

This is a beautifully written book, with plenty of well-written descriptions, as well as the lives of several people entwined in it. Took me back. The plot was interesting, reminiscent of the lives of many aging “hippies.” Drugs had been manifest, reaching for a new reality. It was fairly easy to convince a bunch of druggies that one could open their hearts and minds to a new reality. They would follow him anywhere. It was an intricate plot, totally character-driven and what wonderful characters they were, caricatures, maybe, but maybe real. It is a long book, but well worth the time and effort. Touching, heart-breaking, and so much more. Thanks, Max Ludington, for this effort.

I was invited to read Thorn Tree by St. Martin’s Press. All thoughts and opinions are mine. #Netgalley #StMartinsPress #MaxLudington #ThornTree
Profile Image for BookwormishMe.
391 reviews19 followers
April 15, 2024
4 stars

I really enjoyed this book. It was very different, and I wondered how all the storylines and characters were going to intertwine. In the end the backstories in the flashbacks showed how these people all had histories that overlapped. It was very well done. Just a note, there is a lot about drug use and abuse, and some emotional/sexual abuse as well.

Daniel was a product of the sixties. Lived in California, smoked a bit of weed, kind of a carefree soul. Until tragedy hit his life and he found himself wandering through the desert where he came upon a salvage yard that became his home for a time. During this time he created an artistic masterpiece called Thorn Tree. He was known for it. Someone paid a very large sum of money for it. But after that Daniel became quite lost.

He met up with an old friend from the sixties, Cam, and moved into a guest house on Cam’s property in Beverly Hills. He cleaned up his act and became a teacher. When Cam passed, the house was purchased by a young actress, Celia, with a young son and her father. The son, Dean, became friends with Daniel, by wandering on over to Daniel’s house when his grandfather, Jack, is neglectful.

As these four lives become more interconnected, we see into the past of Jack’s and Daniel’s lives, and the circumstances that has brought them together.

Really great look into the culture and environment of the sixties in California. How it ultimately shaped so many lives, especially in cult-like groups and communes. How some people were able to move along with the times, and others firmly gripped in the mentality that existed at that time and have never changed. Great character studies for these people. Ludington has created a book that immerses you in their lives and what led them to today and how they are.

Not perfect, but a very enjoyable read that I would recommend.
Profile Image for Jeanne.
982 reviews38 followers
April 23, 2024
There is a lot going on in this story and a lot of characters. I would consider Daniel the center character with the rest being related to him. The story starts in the 1960's when he falls in love with Rachel. On a trip to LA to make a drug deal for his boss they become acquainted with a cult that lives in the desert. On their way home Rachel and Daniel stop to rest and come down from an acid trip when Rachel wanders off and falls off a cliff. That's all I'm going to say.

I liked Daniel. He did some sketchy things but turned his life around and became a teacher and now still tutors underprivileged kids. Jack I despised from the start. Celia was trying to be a good mom to her son, Dean, but she had a crappy upbringing and was also in recovery. The chapters were long and there were some characters that were brought in like Gerald, Hunter and Chris, that just added to the muddle and didn't seem to move the story along. The author likes to use big words when a regular word would work better. Then there is the ending. It all came together pretty fast and I thought left a lot of things hanging and not in the read my next book to find out what happens next but more like the author was just done with it.

I would like to thank Netgalley and St. Martin's Press for providing me with a digital copy.
201 reviews2 followers
April 16, 2024
I think that this novel will have readers that put it on their “best of the year” list and others that find it was just not their kind of book. Sadly, I fell somewhere in that latter group. Ludington has a great story line spanning six decades. He depicts a LA lifestyle of sex, drugs, and music in the same timeframe that I was coming of age, so I felt invested in the story.
All his characters have some form of trauma in their lives. His main characters are developed to the point that the reader has empathy for them. I enjoyed the tragic story of Daniel, how he overcame his past, briefly became an art phenomenon, and now is a reclusive retiree. Celia also had fame in her youth as a Hollywood starlet, but now struggles to reclaim some of that recognition.
Ludington has enough people in this novel to populate a small town, many of them having no real reason to be included. My main objection to this book is that, in my opinion, it was overwritten and under-edited.
Ludington’s penchant for using obscure words became a major distraction to me. They paused the storyline: go back, re-read, cogitate, and resume. Quite annoying when used repeatedly.
My thanks to St. Martin’s Press, NetGalley and the author for an advanced copy of this book. My opinions are my own.
2 reviews
December 21, 2023
I was fortunate enough to receive an Advance Reader Copy and have the opportunity to read a novel before it was actually published which was such a great experience. The book had an interesting story line with a number of interesting characters and how their actions in the 60's impacted the rest of their lives. As I was a teenager during the 60's I had acquaintances involved with the drug culture with bad experiences so that made the book upsetting for me and I could not relate to any of the characters because I personally was not involved with that part of the 60's or the gratuitous sex that was part of that time as well. Because of that, the only person in the book I really liked was Celia's son Dean, and that inability to connect with the characters impacted how much I liked the book. Despite that, I was anxious to find out how each of the characters' story lines were going to play out; and since that was not decided by the end of the book, that was a disappointment. Perhaps there will be a Thorn Tree Part 2. Thank you again for the chance to read and comment on this book, and I look forward to sharing my experience with my Book Club.
99 reviews3 followers
April 17, 2024
Being an LA resident I always like to see how writers present LA and it's environs. Thorn Tree is a novel that deals with Hollywood, cults, revenge and how a tragic incident in ones life can truly set you a path you never expected or planned to be on. The main characters are Daniel and Celia. Daniel is guy living in the Hollywood Hills and after an incident with his girlfriend decides to create a piece of art he call Thorn Tree. People come from near far to see it.

Celia is an actress and has a son named Dean. Jack her father watches the child and meets up with Daniel and from that points the story grips you and doesn't let up. You know soemthing is going to happen. The author then goes back and forth and shows what made Daniel the man he and discusses topics of peace and solitude. I don't want to say much more than that except says you see the world of cults and what attracts them to people.

While reading it reminded me of recent novels of the 60's and 70's. The author has a more literary spin on things though. I thoroughly enjoyed this novel. I want to tahnk Netgalley and St. Martin's Press for the read. Would be a fun book club pick too!
Profile Image for Kelli Santistevan.
861 reviews29 followers
April 7, 2024
A beautifully wrought novel on the aftershocks of the heady but dangerous late 1960s and the relationship between trauma and the creative impulse.

Thank you St. Martin’s Press and Netgalley for sending me a review copy of this book in exchange for an honest review! I decided to DNF this book after reading 62 pages. I couldn’t get into this book. The chapters are too long. This book spends a lot of time describing the setting and it gives a lot of details about the characters that are in this story. All of this goes on for pages and pages and I didn’t care. I would rather learn details about the characters as the story goes on because I’m not going to remember the details about all of the characters if I’m being given details at the very beginning. As I was reading about the characters, I was thinking to myself,”Good grief. Do I need to get out a pen and paper and start taking notes about all of these characters?” Also, I don’t mind authors spending a lot of pages describing the setting if I’m reading a fantasy book but if it’s just going on in a regular book, I find it boring.
Profile Image for Jasminegalsreadinglog .
359 reviews8 followers
April 18, 2024
Thorn Tree by Max Ludington is a very evocative novel. We see an art piece, hate it, or like it or love it. But how much of the back story do we know about the artist or what compelled them to create that art?

Thorn Tree is two stories combined in one. Daniel, now a school teacher, was an artist first. Dean, a seven year old boy, lives with his mom, Celia, an actress and Jack, his grandfather. One day, Dean visits Daniel, who is his neighbor. The story then picks from there with the back story of Daniel in almost alternative stories.

The book almost begins in the 1960s, and there's a lot of drugs and cult like atmosphere throughout this book. It's not exactly mystery, but there's an element of mystery for sure. I am still contemplating what I think of this book. Definitely needs content warnings, though.

Thank you, St. Martin's Press, for this book.

CW: Drug use, infidelity, child kidnapping, hostage, cult, prison
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