{"id":6762,"date":"2026-07-10T05:37:17","date_gmt":"2026-07-10T05:37:17","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/bookloves.com\/?p=6762"},"modified":"2026-07-10T05:37:17","modified_gmt":"2026-07-10T05:37:17","slug":"country-people-by-daniel-mason","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/bookloves.com\/?p=6762","title":{"rendered":"Country People by Daniel Mason"},"content":{"rendered":"<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">Some novels talk to you quietly at first, the way a good neighbor does over a fence, and then, before you have noticed, have walked you all the way into the woods. That is the trick <em>Country People by Daniel Mason<\/em> pulls off. It opens with a family crossing the country in a station wagon and closes somewhere stranger and more moving than you expect from a book that spends so much of its time making you laugh.<\/p>\n<h2 class=\"text-text-100 mt-3 -mb-1 text-[1.125rem] font-bold\">The Setup: A Silicon Valley Family Meets the Vermont Woods<\/h2>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">Miles Krzelewski is forty-five, fourteen years into a dissertation on Russian folktales that keeps changing its own subject, and quietly certain he has become the family disappointment. His wife, Kate, is a Milton and Blake scholar with tenure, a gift for making students cry in the good way, and a history of multiple sclerosis that hovers at the edge of every tender scene. When Kate lands a one-year visiting professorship at a small Vermont college, the couple loads up their two children (skeptical, conspiracy-curious Wesley and joyful, name-mangling Olive) and their truffle-hound Giuseppe, and drives east into a place they have romanticized without understanding at all.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">What follows is less a plot than a slow, glorious settling-in. Miles becomes the default parent, the grocery-getter, the ski-league sweeper, and, bit by bit, a collector of the oddest people in the county. That drift is the point. Mason is writing about a man hunting for purpose in a life that already holds one, and about a marriage quietly deciding who gets to worry about whom.<\/p>\n<h2 class=\"text-text-100 mt-3 -mb-1 text-[1.125rem] font-bold\">The Cast: Country People Worth the Title<\/h2>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">The great pleasure of <em>Country People by Daniel Mason<\/em> is its supporting bench, a rogues\u2019 gallery of the rural eccentric that never tips into mockery.<\/p>\n<h3 class=\"text-text-100 mt-2 -mb-1 text-base font-bold\">The Eccentrics You Will Not Forget<\/h3>\n<p><strong>Andrei<\/strong>, a burnt-out biochemist who cures his depression by taking up the scythe, and who pulls Miles into the strange peace of mowing a field by hand.<br \/>\n<strong>Hugh<\/strong>, a wilderness guide whose whole personality is name-dropping the celebrities he once led on a nature walk, dispensing gossip in place of ecology.<br \/>\n<strong>Miss Kayleigh Swan<\/strong>, Olive\u2019s pregnant, camouflage-wearing, crossbow-carrying third-grade teacher, who patrols the forest for reasons that grow funnier and odder the more you learn.<br \/>\n<strong>Snowflake Bentley<\/strong>, a photographer of ice crystals who keeps an \u201cInventory of Wrong Ideas\u201d on index cards, cataloguing every delusion he meets.<\/p>\n<h3 class=\"text-text-100 mt-2 -mb-1 text-base font-bold\">The Legend That Will Not Let Go<\/h3>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">Threaded through it all is a local story drawn from the writings of one Jeremiah Wylkes, a nineteenth-century pastor who claimed his lost dog led him to a hidden passage and a <a href=\"https:\/\/www.voyagers.travel\/news\/scientists-uncover-a-lost-world-hidden-beneath-antarcticas-frozen-tapestry-for-millions-of-years\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">forgotten world beneath the mountains<\/a>. Miles, half-amused and half-hooked, finds himself circling that tale, and the people who believe it, with a hunger he cannot quite explain. The blurb promises the legend \u201cmight not be just a legend after all,\u201d and how Mason handles that promise is best left for you to discover.<\/p>\n<h2 class=\"text-text-100 mt-3 -mb-1 text-[1.125rem] font-bold\">Voice and Style: Folktale Cadence With a Comic Engine<\/h2>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">If you loved the layered, land-haunted shape of <em>North Woods<\/em>, know that <em>Country People by Daniel Mason<\/em> moves differently. It is looser, warmer, and often flat-out hilarious. Mason narrates the early chapters in a fairy-tale register (Miles is \u201cthe husband,\u201d Kate is \u201cthe wife\u201d) that keeps a sly distance, then slowly lets real names and real ache seep through. Recurring interludes from a call-in radio show, <em>The Miscellaneous Minute<\/em>, let earnest Vermonters phone a garden expert about ten-inch worms with little blue eyes. These bits are comic set pieces that also carry the book\u2019s spookier undercurrent while you are busy chuckling.<\/p>\n<h3 class=\"text-text-100 mt-2 -mb-1 text-base font-bold\">What the Book Does Especially Well<\/h3>\n<p><strong>Comic timing.<\/strong> The gas-station snack aisle, the lawnmower-speed humiliation at a faculty party, the celebrity-gossip nature hike. Mason lands them all.<br \/>\n<strong>Marriage on the page.<\/strong> The passages about Kate\u2019s illness and Miles standing by her are among the most affecting writing about a long partnership I have read this year.<br \/>\n<strong>Place without the postcard.<\/strong> Vermont here is muddy, warming, priced out by second-home buyers, and fully alive.<br \/>\n<strong>The Milton scaffolding.<\/strong> Lines from <em>Paradise Lost<\/em> drift through the prose, giving a story about a lost garden its unexpected weight.<\/p>\n<h2 class=\"text-text-100 mt-3 -mb-1 text-[1.125rem] font-bold\">Where It Wanders: An Honest Look at the Weak Spots<\/h2>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">No book earns unqualified love, and this one has soft patches worth flagging for the right reader.<\/p>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">The structure is baggy on purpose, and that will divide people. For long stretches the novel is a string of beautifully observed episodes rather than a story pulling you forward, and the central legend arrives late and stays loose. If you read chiefly for momentum and a tidy payoff, the refusal to tighten may frustrate you. The satire, sharp as it is, sometimes runs to type: a few jokes about tech-bro baby names and rural signage feel broad next to the finer character work around them.<\/p>\n<h4 class=\"text-text-100 mt-2 -mb-1 text-base font-bold\">A Note on the Erudition<\/h4>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">There is also the steady current of Milton, Chekhov, and Tolstoy, part of the book\u2019s soul, yet readers who do not share Mason\u2019s literary furniture may feel they are missing a private joke now and then. None of this sinks the novel. It just means the book asks for patience and repays the patient rather than the hurried.<\/p>\n<h2 class=\"text-text-100 mt-3 -mb-1 text-[1.125rem] font-bold\">Who Should Read It<\/h2>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">This one is for a particular reader, and if that is you, it will feel written to order:<\/p>\n<p>Anyone who adored <em>North Woods<\/em> and wants Mason in a sunnier, funnier key.<br \/>\nReaders who like literary fiction laced with real comedy and a whisper of the uncanny.<br \/>\nParents, partners, and anyone quietly wondering whether their own life is a history, a tragedy, or, if they are lucky, a comedy.<br \/>\nFans of small-town novels where the community is the true main character.<\/p>\n<h5 class=\"text-text-100 mt-2 -mb-1 text-sm font-bold\">One Quick Word Before You Buy<\/h5>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">Save it for later if you want a fast plot or a clean genre shape. This book wants to make you laugh and then catch you off guard with feeling, and it is unashamed about both.<\/p>\n<h2 class=\"text-text-100 mt-3 -mb-1 text-[1.125rem] font-bold\">About the Author<\/h2>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">Daniel Mason is the author of six books, among them <em>The Piano Tuner<\/em>, <em>A Far Country<\/em>, <em>The Winter Soldier<\/em>, <em>A Registry of My Passage upon the Earth<\/em> (a Pulitzer Prize finalist), and <a href=\"https:\/\/bookclb.com\/north-woods-by-daniel-mason\/\"><em>North Woods<\/em><\/a>, a New York Times and Washington Post Top Ten Book of 2023. He is also an associate professor in the Stanford Department of Psychiatry, and that clinical eye shows. He writes about illness, obsession, and belief with a doctor\u2019s patience and a storyteller\u2019s mercy, never diagnosing his characters so much as loving them.<\/p>\n<h2 class=\"text-text-100 mt-3 -mb-1 text-[1.125rem] font-bold\">If You Liked It, Read These Next<\/h2>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\">A short shelf for readers who finish and want more of the same feeling:<\/p>\n<p><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/bookclb.com\/north-woods-by-daniel-mason\/\"><em>North Woods<\/em><\/a> by Daniel Mason:<\/strong> the natural next step, or a perfect prelude, one plot of New England land across centuries.<br \/>\n<strong><em>Crossroads<\/em> by Jonathan Franzen:<\/strong> a family and its private faiths, rendered with roomy, generous attention.<br \/>\n<strong><em>Bewilderment<\/em> by Richard Powers:<\/strong> a father, a sensitive child, and the ache of a warming world.<br \/>\n<strong><em>A Gentleman in Moscow<\/em> by Amor Towles:<\/strong> for its warmth, wit, and love of confinement turned into community.<br \/>\n<strong><a href=\"https:\/\/bookclb.com\/what-we-can-know-by-ian-mcewan\/\"><em>What We Can Know<\/em><\/a>\u00a0by Ian McEwan:<\/strong> a life measured across decades, tender and unhurried.<br \/>\n<strong><em>The Overstory<\/em> by Richard Powers:<\/strong> if the enchanted woods called to you loudest.<\/p>\n<h2 class=\"text-text-100 mt-3 -mb-1 text-[1.125rem] font-bold\">The Verdict<\/h2>\n<p class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal\"><em>Country People by Daniel Mason<\/em> is a warm, wandering, quietly wise book about marriage, parenthood, and the human need to believe in something just past the tree line. It is funnier than it has any right to be and sadder than it first lets on. It will not suit the reader who wants speed, and it strays where a tidier novel would turn. But for anyone willing to walk into the woods with Miles and his family, it offers something rare: a comedy that knows how much it is aching underneath, and a reminder that the stories we live by may matter more than whether they are true.<\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Some novels talk to you quietly at first, the way a good neighbor does over a fence, and then, before you have noticed, have walked you all the way into the woods. That is the trick Country People by Daniel Mason pulls off. It opens with a family crossing the country in a station wagon [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":0,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[4],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-6762","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-bookreviews"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/bookloves.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/6762"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/bookloves.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/bookloves.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/bookloves.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=6762"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/bookloves.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/6762\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/bookloves.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=6762"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/bookloves.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=6762"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/bookloves.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=6762"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}