Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

News from Heaven: The Bakerton Stories
News from Heaven: The Bakerton Stories
News from Heaven: The Bakerton Stories
Audiobook7 hours

News from Heaven: The Bakerton Stories

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

About this audiobook

In News from Heaven, Jennifer Haigh—bestselling author of Faith and The Condition—returns to the territory of her acclaimed novel Baker Towers with a collection of short stories set in and around the fictionalized coal-mining town of Bakerton, Pennsylvania.

Exploring themes of restlessness, regret, redemption and acceptance, Jennifer Haigh depicts men and women of different generations shaped by dreams and haunted by disappointments. 

Janet Maslin of the New York Times has called Haigh's Bakerton stories "utterly, entrancingly alive on the page," comparable to Richard Russo's Empire Falls.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperAudio
Release dateJan 29, 2013
ISBN9780062263049
Author

Jennifer Haigh

Jennifer Haigh is the author of the short-story collection News from Heaven and six bestselling and critically acclaimed novels, including Mrs. Kimble, Faith and Heat and Light, which was named a Best Book of 2016 by the New York Times, The Washington Post, the Wall Street Journal and NPR. Her books have won the PEN/Hemingway Award, the Massachusetts Book Award and the PEN New England Award in Fiction, and have been translated widely. She lives in New England.

More audiobooks from Jennifer Haigh

Related to News from Heaven

Related audiobooks

General Fiction For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for News from Heaven

Rating: 4.181159347826087 out of 5 stars
4/5

69 ratings12 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    News From Heaven: The Bakerton Stories by Jennifer Haigh is a beautifully poignant look at life in a small coal mining community over time beginning just prior to WWII, told in ten short stories. For those readers who do not think they enjoy short stories, I suggest giving Haigh’s work a chance, she is an extremely talented writer and easily draws the reader into the community of Bakerton and the lives of those who live and work in the community. I wanted to read the stories slowly, however I could not set the book down, I wanted to know what would occur in the next story. I adored News From Heaven and look forward to Jennifer Haigh’s next book.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I'm kinda running out of superlatives for Jennifer Haigh's ficton. I've just finished reading NEWS FROM HEAVEN (2013), her collection of intertwined, connected stories from her fictional town of Bakerton, a coal-mining town in western Pennsylvania which I first encountered in her novel, BAKER TOWERS (2005). In between these two books, I read Haigh's novel, FAITH (2011), a departure of sorts, in that it is about the scandals in the Church over clergy abuse of children. But I do have the third book of her Bakerton trilogy, HEAT AND LIGHT, standing by in my to-read pile. And I can't wait. Because Haigh has created her very own very memorable fictional territory with these Bakerton books. I mean, think Winesburg, Ohio, or Yoknapatawpha County. Because yes, Haigh's characters and her grim depictions of the coal-mining town with its company houses and company store, the cave-ins and the slow, painful deaths from black lung, as well as the gradual death of the town itself when the mines play out over the course of a few decades, are every bit as compelling and good as Anderson's Ohio town and Faulkner's Mississippi county. In fact Haigh's people and place may be even better than those old classics from the last century. The people of Bakerton and Saxon County come alive in these stories, and many them die too, as you follow the same families' rise and fall from the immigrant-filled forties up through the decades. Births, adolescence, marriages, divorces, deaths - all of it, as patterns are broken or repeated. Some stay, some escape, but these Bakerton lives will come to seem as real as your own. Enough said. If you love good fiction, these stories will catch you up. My very highest recommendation. - Tim Bazzett, author of the memoir, BOOKLOVER
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    News from Heaven is a collection of 9 short stories organized around the history of a coal mining town in Pennsylvania. The stories can stand on their own as independent stories but also have enough of the unifying theme about life in Bakerton, the book’s imaginary setting, to tie them together. It’s a good book.
    Even though the book is a collection of stories, I feel like the best way to read the book is to read it as if it were a novel, starting one story right after finishing the one before.
    The greatest strengths of the book are that the stories do an excellent job of character development, unusual in short stories. Each character is carefully drawn and realistic. In fact, realism is the second strength of these stories. While the book is fictional, the characters are so nuanced and the setting and situations so real that the book feels a lot more like non-fiction or history than it does a work of fiction.
    Contributing to these strengths is that the characters are so diverse, unique individuals with personalities and lifestyles very different from one another. Again, this serves to make the stories very realistic.
    While I liked all of the stories in this volume, I particularly liked the last, “Desiderata,” because I felt that the ending of the story was so beautifully told through implication and that Joyce, the main character, handled the situation in the way only a more mature and wise person could. Author Jennifer Haigh creates characters that are not only believable and real, but that she seems to have built on real life experiences and her own perceptive insight into not only the fictional character but into everyday real life as well.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This was a well-written book of short stories about folks who currently live or previously lived in a fictitious coal-mining town in Pennsylvania. I chose this book to read while traveling though the coal mining section of northeastern Pennsylvania. I loved the characters and the stories in this book, reading them very quickly. In several of the stories, the same characters appeared at different times in their lives. I got a pretty good glimpse into the lives of coal miners or those related to coal miners after the mines shut down. What I'm now finding disconcerting about reading short stories is that, going back over those stories I've read, I don't seem t remember as much about them as I do when I read novels. I thought that would not be the case with this book as I liked it so much as I was reading it, but I still had difficulty recalling details of the stories later.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    News from Heaven: The Bakerton Storiesby Jennifer HaighI have previously encountered some of these characters, at different stages of their lives, in Miss Haigh's novel Baker Towers. A novel about love and loss in a western Pennsylvania coal mining town, called Bakerton, in the years after World War II.I possess an innate fascination with the elegiac, dare I say romantic, aspects of post World War II coal mine boomtowns. Various members of my family (my father in particular) were merchants in a southwest Virginia coal mining community. Apparently the coal was mined out earlier in southwest Virginia than it was in Bakerton, Pennsylvania, because by the mid 1950's my father had moved our family to Indiana and a new boomtown created by the automotive industry. My family returned for visits to southwest Virginia throughout the 1960's and I have fond memories of those summer vacations. But, the town's decline became increasingly obvious with each passing year throughout the decade. By 1969 little was left of a town which once was the second largest in the county.As a result of my personal history I enjoyed the novel Coal Run by Tawni O'Dell and Homer Hickam's three memoirs set among coal mining communities in Pennsylvania and West Virginia. By mid 2004 the buzz began about Jennifer Haigh's new novel which would be set in a Pennsylvania coal town. I had greatly admired her debut (Mrs. Kimble) and I was aware that she had been raised in a western Pennsylvania coal mining town. I was sure that this novel, to be called Baker Towers, would prove to be the definitive novel on the subject and I couldn't wait for its publication. I read the novel and was disappointed. I couldn't seem to identify with the immigrant/first generation experience or the Catholicism, both of which I am sure existed in southwest Virginia, but completely out of my scope of experience. And, I am quite sure the Amish never moved into southwest Virginia coal country. I was also looking for a more vivid, descriptive setting than Miss Haigh chose to convey. Perhaps I merely wanted Miss Haigh's descriptions to confirm my memories. In my mind I see winding roads following winding creeks, the falling down company houses, the abandoned storefronts in the town area, slag heaps, numerous skinny, stray, barking dogs, the overriding smell of sulfur and rusted and/or abandoned railroad tracks and tipples. And today one cannot overlook the deplorable, abject poverty which has resulted from the closing of the mines. To most these images are not necessarily picturesque; however a significant number of these communities are located within the primeval forest areas of the Appalachians that are among the most beautiful scenic areas of the country. I am reminded of a line from a Rick Bragg book where he states, "It was as if God made them pay for the loveliness of their scenery by demanding everything else." Yet another reason, albeit aesthetic, to deplore and rail against mountaintop removal coal mining.Consequently, despite the fact that News from Heaven:The Bakerton Stories was published early in 2013 I have just finished reading it. All this accomplished was to delay the pleasures of one of the most satisfying story collections that I have ever read. It stands along side Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout and Nothing Gold Can Stay by Ron Rash as one of the finest collections written over the past few years. Several reviewers have compared it favorably to Sherwood Anderson's Winesburg, Ohio.The Bakerton Stories are wide ranging in both scope and time. The stories span nearly 70 years of the 20th century. Throughout the collection there is one dominant, overriding "character" and that is The Baker Brothers Coal Mines. Ultimately, the mines will impact every one of the stories in some manner. The town was named for the mines. "The mines brought the miners, the miners built the camps. Mining camps multiplied until someone called them a town". The mine boom times, mine accidents, mine closings all affect the inhabitants (and thus the stories) of Bakerton exponentially.Most of the stories are connected in a unique manner. Miss Haigh will isolate the tiniest thread, usually a subtle reference to a name, or a family connection, and then proceed to weave that thread into the full tapestry of the next story. I delighted in discovering the connection of one story which leads into the next. And there are some poignantly vivid observations that I admired, such as:*"For a certain kind of teenager, a small town is a prison. For another kind, it is a stage."*A recent widower observes, "He'd rather spend the evening at home alone than drive up to an empty house."*The collection's title reference, "We sat a long moment in the dark car. The white flakes landed like news from heaven: notes from elsewhere, fallen from the stars."*On the decline of the coal town Bakerton, "At holidays, at school breaks, I came back to visit. Driving down Main Street was like visiting a beloved aunt in hospice, a breadth away from the grave."*She had never admitted to anyone-why would she?-that books had brought her as much joy as her children have, and considerably less pain."These ten stories of a dying town, gasping for breath, evoke vibrant images of a bygone era with exquisitely drawn characters and the humanity of a first rate author. Each and every story contains laudable aspects unto itself. As with all great fiction the stories address the human condition. The location really doesn't much matter. The stories are about what we each encounter on a daily basis. The Bakerton Stories are about hopes and dreams, guilt and failure, love and loss. My two favorite stories, without question, are "Broken Star", where a family secret comes to light too late to save a life, and "The Bottom of Things", where a successful businessman returns home to Bakerton for his parents 50th Anniversary, triggering memories of his troubled brother's death and his guilt over whether he could have personally prevented it. While these two are my personal favorites I assure you that there is not a slacker in the entire collection. This is a truly remarkable book and brought me one of the pleasantest reading experiences of my life.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is a really wonderful collection of stories, all loosely connected by a coal-mining town (Bakerton, Pennsylvania) and its people. These are quieter stories, that fill the gaps behind the illusions of people, the high school stars, the pretty girls, the shy, awkward ones too. The stories range from pre-WWII to some that I was not quite sure, but felt like 1990s. The writing is absolutely beautiful and spare with surprising depth. The first collection in a while wherein the dialog feels incredibly real, and often much is said by what is not said. Most of these stories are portraits of various people and in witnesses them, the town, and its ups and downs comes alive. Most of the stories are quite sad as none of the lives turned out quite like they though they would, although some have hopeful endings. Overall, highly recommended if you like quieter, real fiction, i.e., moments in time, as not much happens and there are no real plots to many of the stories. That did not bother me though, in fact, it was part of the draw.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Characters overlap in this collection of short stories in an affecting way, because the reader sees the effects of the passage of time on these people who live so close together in this increasingly dysfunctional town.In the first story, a young girl is sent to Manhattan to be a live-in maid for an upper-class Jewish family; it is done to provide money for the family at home. An act of kindness is misinterpreted and her stay there is short.Another story is about a 30 year old man named Sandy who moves away, but does not escape the pull of going home: "The town he'd fled, where mines had killed has father; the bleak small-town life worse than jail, a prison from which no one escaped. And yet he had considered it: driving back east with his bride beside him..."Each portrait is lovingly rendered: a middle-age spinster who trusts her instincts against all odds and experiences love for the first time in her life...a one-time high-school football star who tastes the glory but harbors a secret that dooms him to eventual failure...a successful brother - dubbed "J.R" by the town after J.R. Ewing - who feels guilt about letting his younger brother fall through the cracks. My favorite lines: From "Favorite Son" "We sat a long moment in the dark car. The white flakes landed like news from heaven: notes from elsewhere, fallen from the stars."
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I have one shelf on my many, many bookshelves devoted to my all-time favorite books. Jennifer Haigh's debut novel Mrs. Kimble holds a place of honor there. She is remarkable writer, and her last novel Faith just reaffirmed my belief that she is one of the best fiction writers out there.She recently published a short story collection, News From Heaven: The Bakerton Stories, set in different eras in the coal mining town of Bakerton, Pennsylvania. Some of the characters were featured in her previous novel, Baker Towers. Each of the ten stories is moving, and anyone who has lived in a small town with one major employer will recognize the people in these stories. Haigh's describes people in just a few sentences and you get them right away. Teenage Regina describes her mother this way in Broken Star:"She greeted all presents this way- you shouldn't have- no matter how worthy the occasion or how trifling the gift. It was a habit born of embarrassment. No gift- even one she'd always wished for- was worth drawing attention to herself."I feel like I know this woman because I know people just like her.She also has such a sense of place, as with this sentence from the same story:"Night was falling as we left the bus station, an amenity that, until then, I hadn't known the town possessed."There are many people who live lives in a small box, and even those who live in a large city may contain themselves to just a few blocks.There were a few stories that really moved me. A Place in the Sun is about Sandy Novak, one of the characters from Baker Towers. Sandy is handsome man who left Bakerton to head west. He ends up living hand-to-mouth, bartending here, working as short-order cook there. He sleeps with his boss' wife, then steals from the boss and takes off to Vegas with a younger woman. Life hasn't turned out the way he hoped, and he thinks he has one last chance for a big score.Sandy's story continues back in Bakerton in To The Stars, where Sandy's siblings Joyce, Dorothy and George are left to deal with the fallout Sandy leaves behind. We see the family dynamic in this encounter about Joyce:"She accepts condolences and prayers. It is her role, always: the public face of the family. Dorothy, whose backwardness is known and accepted, busies herself in the kitchen. George is nowhere to be found."Again, in just a few sentences we know so much about this family and each sibling's place in it.We see what happens to the high school football hero who can't make it in college in Favorite Son, which also has the best line in the book:"For a certain kind of teenager, a small town is a prison. For another, it is a stage." A lonely nurse meets a handsome younger man and her life changes in Thrift. What Remains tells the sad story of Sunny Baker, the last remaining descendant of the Baker family, the founders of the Bakerton.The story that moves me most is The Bottom of Things, which features Ray, someone who made it out of Bakerton and ended up with a good life in Houston. Ray reluctantly goes home for his parents 50th anniversary party, and feels guilty for what he left behind. His has no relationship with his sons since he divorced their mother years ago. His brother Kenny has never gotten over his time in Vietnam; it is this relationship that seems to hurt the most.News From Heaven is about family, relationships, loyalty, guilt, and the sacrifices people make. It's about the people who live in this decaying town and how that decay affects them. As I read this, I felt like I was peeking in the windows of these people's homes and watching them live their lives. The lyrical writing soars, and I wish I was reading this again for the first time. It's one of the best books so far in 2013.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I generally avoid short stories; however, if they are written by Jennifer Haigh, I will read them as soon as possible. These inter-related, yet stand-alone, stories provide a rich perspective of life in a small mining town in western Pennsylvania in the middle of the 20th century. They encompass hope, despair, courage, cowardice, generosity and all the other qualities that define the human condition. I have been a fan of Jennifer Haigh's writing since reading Mrs. Kimble and her recent novel, Faith, is quite simply superb. She is a remarkably talented writer.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Short stories are not generally my milieu but Jennifer Haigh's new collection of interconnected stories tied together both by character and place is magnificent. Her novels, Baker Towers and Faith were wonderfully done so it perhaps shouldn't be a surprise that this sort-of sequel to Baker Towers is also a thoughtful and beautifully rendered portrait of a town and a people. The stories span the entire life of the town from the grand heights of the mine production to the slow, economically depressed strangling perseverance of the town after the mines are played out. And the characters in each of the stories, whether they are those who remain in Bakerton or those who leave are forever imprinted with the town of their birth, connected to the place no matter how far they roam. Although this is a sequel of sorts, revisiting characters and fleshing out other minor characters from the novel Baker Towers, the collection easily stands on its own, an homage to the blue collar workers and their struggles in a town defined and then abandoned by its industry. There is a sober tone to the tales, even in the boom years, foreshadowing the long decline to follow. The families portrayed in the stories, the immigrant stock and the sadly depleted, reclusive last remaining member of the founding family, are also on a slow decline, mirroring the fate of the town. Haigh has rendered the place and the people so poignantly and beautifully that it is both very much specifically Bakerton, Pennsylvania with its Lubickis, Novaks, and Bakers and a universal mining town peopled with its real inhabitants. The stories build on each other and characters weave in and out of the narrative in much the same way that they do in real small town life. From the opening story of a young Polish girl in New York City working as a maid for a Jewish family to the final story with an elderly Joyce Novak Hauser deciding to keep her late husband's bike and learn to ride it, each of the stories is quietly introspective and exquisitely complete in and of itself. A finely wrought, well-written jewel of a book, the stories explore the life of a town on its downward slide, the ways in which we are all connected, and how we carry our roots within us always no matter the buffeting winds of life.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I could not wait to read News from Heaven: The Bakerton Stories since I enjoyed Baker Towers so much. News from Heaven: The Bakerton Stories did not disappoint. Haigh filled in some of the missing links of individual lives and families that the reader was introduced to in Baker Towers. I would not say that reading Baker Towers is a prerequisite because the reader will enjoy these loosely connected stories nonetheless. It is no surprise that my favorite story of the collection was about the rebel of the Novak family, Sandy. Sandy was the character from Baker Towers that I speculated about the most. I was excited when I came to his story and sadden by the ending. Joyce Novak is still as resilient as she was in Baker Towers. Then there are stories like the young Annie Lubicki’s journey from Bakerton, PA to work for a Jewish family in New York. There are also family stories such as a father coming to terms with selfish behavior and a return of an aunt changing an entire family dynamic. Only one out of the entire collection did not fit the mix for me. Haigh closed all the stories perfectly.These stories were delightful and introspective. If you read Baker Towers there were times you were nostalgic when you read how the times have changed Bakerton. For the reader that picks up this book without any background on the city and people of Bakerton, they will not be lost. Haigh writes News from Heaven as if she is writing about old friends. I am glad she visited them again.Advanced copy provided by the publisher. In no way does this influence my review. The opinions I have expressed are my own.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    These are blue collared short stories, the lives of working men and woman, all set in the mining town of Bakerton. It is helpful but not necessary to have read [book:Baker Towers|72876], many of the characters are here in these short stories. Stories that span the time frame of the beginning of the mines operations. the dying of the mines and the slow death of a town, which at one time had employed over nine-hundred men. It is the story of those who went away, some successful, others who were not and came back. A nostalgic look at a community long gone, who once lived in company housing and shopped in company stores. A community who married in VFW halls, and helped each other out, a community that knew each others neighbors, which was sometimes good and sometimes not. I loved this grouping of stories, they are real, they have life.