Wednesday, April 1, 2026

HEARTWOOD by Amity Gaige

If you’re thinking of hiking the Appalachian Trail, this book might change your mind.  Valerie is a nurse who has taken on the upper half of the trail in order to repair her soul after witnessing so many patients dying from Covid.  In Maine, nearing the end of her trip, she fails to meet up with her husband at their rendezvous point.  Bev is a 6-foot-tall game warden in her 50s who is heading up the search for Valerie.  She has battled misogyny in her job for her entire career, but the battle to find Valerie is wearing on her even more, as she has to report the lack of progress each day to Valerie’s husband and parents.  The third woman in this story is Lena, a wheelchair-bound retired scientist in a senior-living facility who at first thinks the missing hiker could be her daughter.  When she finds out otherwise, she continues to ponder Valerie’s whereabouts, along with a young man with whom she chats on social media.  Valerie’s story is told through a journal that she claims keeps her sane, but in order to lighten her pack she has previously jettisoned the tracking device that would have made the search for her quite easy.  At times I felt that this novel should have been named Heartbreak instead of Heartwood, as Valerie’s situation becomes more and more dire and Bev’s exasperation becomes increasingly palpable.  Even Lena becomes so exasperated that she destroys her computer in a temper tantrum.  As for Valerie, we ultimately find that her altruism is not always well placed, especially when self-preservation is at stake.

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