Tree of Smoke

He is following in the footsteps of his uncle, Colonel Francis Xavier Sands, a hard-drinking WWII war hero and legendary CIA operative.Colonel Sands assigns Skip the daunting task of copying and cross-referencing a huge set of index cards containing information about people, places, and events.The Colonel believes these cards, which he calls the Tree of Smoke, represent vital intelligence that will help the Americans win the war.Initially, Skip believes that he will become an important part of the war effort; however, he is assigned to a remote village where he has little contact with anyone other than his two house servants.He accuses Skip of having passed information on to Voss and their superiors at the CIA (though the real mole is Hao, who is angling to get relocated from Vietnam through any means necessary).A nurse named Kathy who is working for a Canadian NGO is widowed at an early age when her husband, a missionary in the Philippines, is killed.[8] Brian Reynolds Myers, in The Atlantic, wrote a highly critical review of both the book and its author, opining that "once we Americans have ushered a writer into the contemporary pantheon, we will lie to ourselves to keep him there."[9] In Literary Review, John Dugdale wrote: "Johnson's expertise in dialogue and atmosphere means it works on the level of the individual scene, suggesting that his natural form is the short story; but when it comes to overall structure and main plotlines, Tree of Smoke is tellingly dependent on reworking other fiction."[11] Kirkus Reviews stated that, with the novel, "Denis Johnson has bigger whales to land in his longest and most ambitious work to date" and that "As the novel obliterates all distinctions between good and evil, allies and enemies, loyalty and betrayal, it sustains the suspense of who will survive long enough to have the last word."[12] Norman Rush, in The New York Review of Books, said: "Tree of Smoke is an ambitious, long, dense, daunting novel sited at the heart of a great American evil, the Vietnam War ... Like the war itself, Tree of Smoke delivers an intense experience of loss, shame, futility, confusion—all without benefit of editorializing.
Denis JohnsonFarrar, Straus & GirouxVietnamAmerican involvementdebut novelNational Book Award for FictionPulitzer PrizeForeign Language SchoolSong of SolomonBook of JoelExodusBook MarksBookmarks MagazineThe New York TimesJim LewisLev GrossmanPulitzer Prize for FictionNew York TimesBrian Reynolds MyersThe AtlanticLiterary ReviewPublishers WeeklyKirkus ReviewsNorman RushThe New York Review of BooksNational Book FoundationMyers, B. R.Meghan O'RourkeKatie RoipheJames SurowieckiThe Echo MakerRichard PowersShadow CountryPeter MatthiessenAngelsFiskadoroThe Stars at NoonResuscitation of a Hanged ManThe Name of the WorldNobody MoveTrain DreamsThe Laughing MonstersCar Crash While HitchhikingJesus' SonThe Largesse of the Sea MaidenTriumph Over the GraveThe Incognito Lounge and Other PoemsThe Incognito LoungeHit MeStars at NoonThe Man with the Golden ArmNelson AlgrenCollected Stories of William FaulknerWilliam FaulknerFrom Here to EternityJames JonesInvisible ManRalph EllisonThe Adventures of Augie MarchSaul BellowA FableTen North FrederickJohn O'HaraThe Field of VisionWright MorrisThe Wapshot ChronicleJohn CheeverThe Magic BarrelBernard MalamudGoodbye, ColumbusPhilip RothThe Waters of KronosConrad RichterThe MoviegoerWalker PercyMorte d'UrbanJ. F. PowersThe CentaurJohn UpdikeHerzogThe Collected Stories of Katherine Anne PorterKatherine Anne PorterThe FixerThe Eighth DayThornton WilderJerzy KosińskiJoyce Carol OatesMr. Sammler's PlanetThe Complete StoriesFlannery O'ConnorChimeraJohn BarthAugustusJohn WilliamsGravity's RainbowThomas PynchonA Crown of Feathers and Other StoriesIsaac Bashevis SingerDog SoldiersRobert StoneThe Hair of Harold RouxThomas WilliamsWilliam GaddisThe Spectator BirdWallace StegnerBlood TieMary Lee SettleGoing After CacciatoTim O'BrienSophie's ChoiceWilliam StyronThe World According to GarpJohn IrvingThe Stories of John CheeverRabbit Is RichSo Long, See You TomorrowWilliam MaxwellThe Color PurpleAlice WalkerThe Collected Stories of Eudora WeltyEudora WeltyEllen GilchristWhite NoiseDon DeLilloWorld's FairE. L. DoctorowPaco's StoryLarry HeinemannParis TroutPete DexterSpartinaJohn CaseyMiddle PassageCharles JohnsonMatingAll the Pretty HorsesCormac McCarthyThe Shipping NewsE. Annie ProulxA Frolic of His OwnSabbath's TheaterAndrea BarrettCold MountainCharles FrazierCharming BillyAlice McDermottWaitingHa JinIn AmericaSusan SontagThe CorrectionsJonathan FranzenThree JunesJulia GlassThe Great FireShirley HazzardThe News from ParaguayLily TuckEurope CentralWilliam T. VollmannLet the Great World SpinColum McCannLord of MisruleJaimy GordonSalvage the BonesJesmyn WardThe Round HouseLouise ErdrichThe Good Lord BirdJames McBrideRedeploymentPhil KlayFortune SmilesAdam Johnson The Underground RailroadColson WhiteheadSing, Unburied, SingThe FriendSigrid NunezTrust ExerciseSusan ChoiInterior ChinatownCharles YuHell of a BookJason MottThe Rabbit HutchTess GuntyBlackoutsJustin Torres