Where You Once Belonged
By Kent Haruf
4/5
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About this ebook
Deftly plotted, defiantly honest, Where You Once Belonged sings the song of a wounded prairie community in a narrative with the earmarks of a modern American classic. In prose as lean and supple as a spring switch, Haruf describes a high school football star who wins the heart of the loveliest girl in the county and the admiration of men twice his age. Fun-loving, independent, Burdette engages in the occasional prank. But when he turns into a man, his high jinks turn into crimes--with unspeakable consequences. Now, eight years later, Burdette has returned to commit his greatest trespass of all. And the people of Holt may not be able to stop him.
Kent Haruf
Kent Haruf is the author of six novels (and, with the photographer Peter Brown, West of Last Chance). His honours include a Whiting Foundation Writers' Award, the Mountains & Plains Booksellers Award, the Wallace Stegner Award, and a special citation from the PEN/Hemingway Foundation; he was also a finalist for the National Book Award, the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, and The New Yorker Book Award. Benediction was shortlisted for the Folio Prize. He died in November 2014, at the age of seventy-one.
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Reviews for Where You Once Belonged
181 ratings15 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5With this one, I have now finished reading all of the novels in Haruf’s oeuvre. Yes, it seems a bit odd to end off with his second book but I wasn’t reading them in publication order. This one did not capture my attention to the same extend as the other books did. With this one, Haruf seems to be experimenting with setting and story structure. Maybe he was still trying to find his writing groove. While still set in the fictional town of Holt, this one takes extra side trips outside of Holt to other urban centres. While this story starts near the ending, once we dip back in time, it has a more traditional story structure with a linear progression of events. I guess every community has its “bad seed/ bad apple”, which in this story is Jack Burdette. Haruf straightforward prose is still evident, but there is an awkwardness to the writing that seems to suit the characters, almost as if the story was writing itself. While Haruf is known for his seemingly simple stories with some tension/ undercurrent simmering below the surface, this story wasn’t as compelling or, IMO, as powerfully written as his other stories. It is not that I have grown tired of Holt and the town folk. Each of Haruf stories – with the exception of Plainsong and Eventide – is populated with predominantly new characters to get to know and different time periods to settle into (although some time periods across the books do overlap). I just wasn’t that interested in reading a story about a small town high school football player and the decisions he makes. I actually perked up when the town’s hopes for retribution falls apart as it meant that Finally something was going to happen. Well, what happened wasn’t quite what I was expecting, but maybe that is the point. Maybe the story with a message about family and community and the bonds we make like Haruf’s other stories. Maybe in this case, it is about the bonds we break or cannot hold onto, or maybe, it is just a story.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Haruf returns to Holt, Colorado, this time with a story of betrayal, redemption, and tragedy.
Jack Burdette was a wild kid who grew up to be a big frog in Holt's little puddle -- high school football star, ex-GI returning to his home town where he stepped into a job managing the local grain co-op.
Burdette is a totally unlikeable character -- a bully, a cheat, and a blowhard -- and perhaps the only false note in the book is the friendship between him and narrator Pat Arbuckle, another hometown boy who grew up to take over his father's small-town newspaper. The friendship has pretty well retreated by the time Jack Burdette betrays the trust of his employer and walks out on his pregnant wife and their two small boys, taking along $150,000 of the co-op's money.
How the town reacts to this betrayal and how Burdette's abandoned wife copes with her situation forms the core of this slim novel, and exposes the heart of small-town America, warts and all. As always, Haruf uses simple language and characters who are readily identifiable without ever becoming cliche, and creates a story that burrows right into the core of who we are. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I've never been to America, but Haruf's stories make me feel as though know the small town rural areas pretty well. He had a great way of really putting the reader in the place. I don't think this early work is his best, but it's definitely time well spent to read it.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Haruf will always be one of my favorite writers. His characters are so human, all of his endings are true to life, not what you want, but what you should expect.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Former high school football star Jack Burdette returns to his hometown of Holt, Colorado, in the 1980's, after an eight-year absence. Jack has alienated the townspeople due to his past actions. His friend, Pat Arbuckle, the local newspaper editor, tells the sad story of Jack’s rise and fall.
I enjoyed the first half of this book. The author writes in a clear, crisp style. He maintains dramatic tension by creating curiosity to find out what could have gone so terribly wrong in Jack’s life. It is an indictment of the way our heroes are idolized, and the impact it can have on the psyche of those that buy into the hero worship. Unfortunately, the second half goes downhill, with one completely unrealistic major plot point and an ending I could not appreciate. This book seems to me like a long introduction to another more in-depth story, which remains untold. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5WHERE YOU ONCE BELONGED (1990) was Kent Haruf's third novel. (He only wrote six, and I've now read four of them.) The title at once brings to mind the Beatles' tune "Get Back," but I am unable to make any coherent connection to Haruf's story, unless it's simply that the central character, Jack Burdette, does indeed come back to his hometown of Holt, Colorado, several years after he had absconded with $150K of the townspeople's money, embezzled from the local co-op elevator that he was managing. That aside, WYOB, is a character-rich, compelling tale of a high school hero gone too soon to seed, who takes shameless advantage of the town and people who idolized him. Because Jack Burdette is an unprincipled, amoral bastard who takes and takes from those who admire and even love him. The narrator is his boyhood friend and classmate, Pat Arbuckle, who, as Holt's newspaper editor, bears witness to Burdette's perfidy, criminal activity and abandonment of his wife and children. Arbuckle, whose own marriage is in tatters, falls hard for the wife, and, well, you gotta read this book, okay? 'Cause it's really, really GOOD! The way Burdette capitalized on his athletic reputation and popularity, took what he wanted, and took off, also brought to mind Updike's Harry Angstrom of RABBIT, RUN. At considerably less than two hundred pages, WYOB is a quick read, but it leaves the reader with plenty to think about. My highest recommendation. (Two more Harufs left to read. I hope I can.)- Tim Bazzett, author of the memoir, BOOKLOVER
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Oh my! Now I understand why so many love the writings of this author! One book, and I'm hooked and will read all his others. This is a story that is tragic in the complexity of the main character. Jack Burdette is not someone you embrace or cheer on. He is self absorbed, narcissistic and a despicable man! The character is so very well developed, it is breathtaking in complexity.Once a football hero, that is about it for the accomplishments he's had throughout his pitiful life. It seems he was born with a chip on his shoulder, caring so very little for any one who happens to trod on his path. He has a friend, the only one. His name is Pat Arbuckle and he inherited his father's small newspaper in a small town that produced one hero who grabbed the ball and smashed anyone who dared to come near! Still, Pat had an adulation and wanted to draw near like a match to an already burning flame. Pat is everything Jack is not. Pat has courage, well- deserved respect, and is an all-around good guy! But, read just what Jack does to Pat, how he destroys, with no regret!Their lives became tragically entwined when Jack embezzled a lot of money from this small town that looked up to him, routed for him as he stole from them as well! He was handed the job of running the company that employed many. He took what he thought was his rightful place and ran with the money in the fashion he ran with the ball. Crippling, demeaning and never regretful.When he leaves Holt, Colorado for eight years and suddenly returns, he is not greeted as a hero, rather as a vagrant that no longer belongs. But then, again, he really never belonged to anyone or anything. He took a wife, ruined her life, until Pat tried to redeem her, fell in love with her and tried valiantly to save her and the children Jack so blatantly left behind without a thought of their well fare.Now, rather than cheering him on, Jack gets a smack on the back of his head, and this is just a bit of what he deserved! Riding symbolically into town on a bright red Cadillac, he parked it right on main street where he eerily, creepily stayed, watching the townspeople live their lives as he returned to smash them to bits.He returns to take what is not rightfully his, nor does he deserve. But, taking, robbing and stealing is all he knows how to do. And, he does it so darn well!Five Stars for this incredible book
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This is one of Kent Haruf's earlier books. Set in Holt, Colorado, this is the story of Jack Burdette. The book begins as Jack has returned to Holt after doing something that the people of Holt cannot forgive him for. Through flashbacks, we gradually learn how Jack went from being a high school football star to a businessman. Told through the voice of Holt's newspaper editor, this book has Haruf's characteristic voice - straightforward and authentic. Although I think Haruf grew as a writer throughout his career, every this early book is well worth reading.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Well written story that is told kind of slowly. The story of Jack Burdette, small town sports star who runs a little on the wild side but doesn't seem like a bad sort at all. Seems like just about everyone likes him. Except the sheriff. When he went off very briefly to college he went from being the big fish in a little pond to a smaller fish in a big pond. Things didn't work out so he joined the Army and two years later he returned to the small town of Holt where he had grown up. He could be the big well-liked fish in the pond again. Life went on.We know from the first page of the story that something really bad happened with the town and Jack eight years before the telling of this tale. After the first few pages we flash way back in time to when Jack started first grade. The story is told by a man who was once his friend and is now the newspaper editor of the small town weekly paper. Much of the story is about the townspeople of Holt, and this editor, our narrator, Pat Arbuckle. Don't quote me on that name. It may have been mentioned in pieces only once or twice. This is a short novel and it never lost my attention. Good but not great stuff. I can't figure the moral of the story though. It is a story about misplaced trust. The long blurb on the back cover misled me. I would call it at the very least hyperbole.There's another blurb on the back cover credited to the Denver Post: "Where You Once Belonged speaks with the authenticity of ... Hemingway and Faulkner." I certainly got a Hemingway vibe from this, especially in the latter half of the book. The ending was very unexpected. I'm not sure what I was expecting but I did not see the end coming. This is all a little twisty.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Jack Burdette was a football hero in Holt, Colorado; he was big, loud, daring, and could be charming. For years he dated Wanda Jo but on a business trip to Tulsa for the local grain elevator where he was manager, he came back to Holt married to a quiet girl named Jesse. The story is told from the viewpoint of Pat Arbuckle, the town's newspaper editor and opens with Jack returning to Holt after a long absence. He is immediately arrested and the rest of the book tells the story of the crime which affected so many people in Holt. This story runs true for a small town. The coffee shop, the local newspaper, and most importantly, the grain coop plays a huge part. Haruf presents characters that are real and although the action is subtle, it has great impact. The story is sad. Lives that were living quietly in Holt were greatly affected by Burdette's crime. There is anger and hatred. The ending is gripping. Another great story of ordinary lives living in quiet desperation.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Although not nearly as enjoyable as "The Tie That Binds" or "Plainsong", I was enjoying this book about how a small town, well liked , good ole boy's surprising criminal activity, betrayal, and abandonment affected an entire community. The plot was building up to what I thought would be a satisfying climax then suddenly to my surprise, I was let down by an abrupt ending.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I have read all but one of this author's books and they are all solid stories, that you immediately can fall into reading.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Take a side road and Holt County, Colorado to get a glimpse into the richness of the people who live there. In this book we follow the life of Jack Burdette as he goes from the town hero to the most hated person in town. See how his actions affect the various people in his life as he rushes toward what he wants out of life.This novel delivers a powerful story that had me enthralled to the end. Though I found the ending disappointing and kind of heart wrenching. I enjoyed the various story lines that flowed with in the pages and felt a true connection with the narrator. I would recommend this book for those who love a small slice of life with their coffee at reading time. :).
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A villain returns to town and gets thrown in jail; the rest of the book tells us, step by step, about his impact on the town. Lovely spare writing; a plot carefully built. Not quite as magnificent as Plainsong, but close.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Very well written novel set in a small town--no words wasted. Beautiful words--devastating ending.