The Other

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From the author of the best-selling Snow Falling on Cedars, a dazzling new novel about youth and idealism, adulthood and its compromises, and two powerfully different visions of what it means to live a good life.

John William Barry has inherited the pedigree—and wealth—of two of Seattle’s elite families; Neil Countryman is blue-collar Irish. Nevertheless, when the two boys meet in 1972 at age sixteen, they’re brought together by what they have in common: a fierce intensity and a love of the outdoors that takes them, together and often, into Washington’s remote backcountry, where they must rely on their wits—and each other—to survive.

Soon after graduating from college, Neil sets out on a path that will lead him toward a life as a devoted schoolteacher and family man. But John William makes a radically different choice, dropping out of college and moving deep into the woods, convinced that it is the only way to live without hypocrisy. When John William enlists Neil to help him disappear completely, Neil finds himself drawn into a web of secrets and often agonizing responsibility, deceit, and tragedy—one that will finally break open with a wholly unexpected, life-altering revelation.
Riveting, deeply humane,
The Other is David Guterson’s most brilliant and provocative novel to date.

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Amazon Best of the Month, June 2008: When John William Barry and Neil Countryman meet at a high school track meet in the early 1970s, they are two sides of the same coin: John is a trust fund baby and student of a prestigious private school while Neil is solidly working class, but they share an affinity for the outdoors and apprehension over impending changes in their lives. After an unintentionally challenging week lost in the wilds of the North Cascades, John is compelled to an ascetic path: life in a remote river valley in the Olympic Peninsula rainforest, where he chips a shelter from a granite wall and immerses himself in the esoterica of Gnostic dualism --a philosophy that holds that the material world is illusional and destructive. Neil meanwhile chooses a traditional path as a father and school teacher, despite his troubled friend's exhortations to eschew "hamburger world" and find truth in a simpler, stripped-down existence. Nothing is that simple, of course, and The Other compellingly explores the compromises we make to balance meaning and security in our lives through the choices (and their subsequent consequences) of these two men. --Jon Foro

From Publishers Weekly

Guterson (Snow Falling on Cedars) runs out of gas mulling the story of two friends who take divergent paths toward lives of meaning. A working-class teenager in 1972 Seattle, Neil Countryman, a middle of the pack kind of guy and the book's contemplative narrator, befriends trust fund kid John William Barry—passionate, obsessed with the world's hypocrisies and alarmingly prone to bouts of tears—over a shared love of the outdoors. Guterson nicely draws contrasts between the two as they grow into adulthood: Neil drifts into marriage, house, kids and a job teaching high school English, while John William pulls an Into the Wild, moving to the remote wilderness of the Olympic Mountains and burrowing into obscure Gnostic philosophy. When John William asks for a favor that will sever his ties to the hamburger world forever, loyal Neil has a decision to make. Guterson's prose is calm and pleasing as ever, but applied to Neil's staid personality it produces little dramatic tension. Once the contrasts between the two are set up, the novel has nowhere to go, ultimately floundering in summary and explanation. (June)
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Review:

4.3 out of 5

86.00% of customers are satisfied

5.0 out of 5 stars Astonishing clarity on the value of fathers and a life of purpose

D.B. · July 7, 2013

While this book lacks the plot and historical analysis of the outstanding Snow Falling on Cedars, it has something much more powerful: a clear case for the value of ordinary, loving parents--fathers in particular--and a sense of purpose in living one's life. I may be responding to this work through the prism of my own struggles: like Neil Countryman I am the child of a blue-collar father and a resident of the Pacific Northwest. I identify with his work ethic because in the same era I waited tables and sold clothes for tuition money while kids with financial aid packages bought stereos and lots of the aforementioned clothes. And much like Neil Countryman, I learned that those advantages meant little when compared to the advantages of strong parents and determination.Neil's obsession with great literature and poetry fills for him the role of a spiritual center while John William's fascination with the Gnostics does little to address the gaping holes in his soul. Their mutual love for the wilderness gives them a way to connect, but their obvious love for one another provides them both with anchors that don't quite keep them moored to satisfaction. It's easy to wonder what could have soothed the frantic colic of the adult John William, what could have answered the perpetual questions of Neil Countryman after John William's death.My one quibble with the book was the gross "Whole-Foods-ization" of Neil in the form of precious foodstuffs. I'd have appreciated seeing Neil saunter down to Ivar's, order a 4-piece, and toss the fries to the seagulls. Had Neil remained a bit truer to his roots when living in the city, I'd have probably liked this even more than Snow Falling on Cedars.

4.0 out of 5 stars Rich and sumptuous

B.W. · November 14, 2011

I just finished David Guterson's novel "The Other". The book is set in the Northwest; on the Olympic Peninsula, in Oregon and Seattle. I thought it was a wonderful book. In the Sunday NY Times Book Review, Bruce Barcott wrote, "...his recollections of life in Seattle have a wonderful richness and texture." I'd say the same about Guterson's descriptions of the Hoh River Valley. Some sentences are long and some paragraphs go on for a page or more, but like the beauty of the Hoh Rainforest itself, Guterson's writing is quiet and timeless. This novel is a sumptuous character study of two boys on the edge of manhood and the differences of their youthful dreams. And it's also reminder of how beautiful is our corner of the world.

3.0 out of 5 stars Not the best of Guterson's otherwise excellent books

W. · January 4, 2019

I first came across David Guterson's works, like so many, by reading "Snow Failling on Cedars". I've lived in the Seattle area since 1992, and particularly enjoy novels set in places that I know that envelope the scenery, culture and history into the story. My other favorite books are "East of the Mountains", "Ed King" and "Our Lady of the Forest". I've read all of his other published works as well, but I don't particularly find this book engaging. Well-written, yes.The theme is the question between living a life of purity and one of compromise, but the life of purity has a shadow of selfishness and worthlessness, while the life of compromise offers a richer and more meaningful existence on a human level, let alone a material one. And so the book poses this question, and never quite works it out, but shows many sides to the choice. It is an interesting philosophical question that many people grapple with in their late teens and early 20's, and the interesting way in which Guterson explores the question through the novel is, well, novel. Well written, interesting question, written in a place that I love that is evocatively brought to life; why, then, did it leave me unsatisfied? I don't really know. I've asked myself, and my best explanation is that I have already faced and answered the question long ago, and so it doesn't personally connect with me as the theme in "East of the Mountains" does now that I am growing much older. If you have not thought much about this question, you may find this novel to be one of your favorites, but for me, in the end, it did not grab my heart or my mind.

5.0 out of 5 stars I'm just a fan

A. · April 26, 2016

I write this review with the bias of being a fan of this author's. Once again, Guterson's inclination/knowledge of nature shines through in another one of his books. I was a little bit taken aback, however, when reading the part about Neil's experience in teaching ESL to immigrant children. I especially do not think I talked like that when I was placed in ESL classes as a kid. But, of course, if I was not then moved to more advanced English courses, I might not have ever read any of the author's books. I also did not expect that ending, which gave me much to think about, but then again I did not expect the two friends' time in the woods to end like that, either.

4.0 out of 5 stars YES! and no

F. · June 8, 2008

I have been waiting for David Guterson's next book for several years.What I liked: each of the scenes in the mountains with his eccentric and then bewildering friend, John William; the scenes in his classroom (too brief, wanted more, but then I too was a high school teacher); the trek through Europe and Neil's falling in love and early relationship. The reality of how poor many people were in that era as they struggled their way through college was very true to life, and Neil's commentaries on a variety of poets interested me as well.I also admired the way Guterson interweaves the third-person narrative through secondary narrators even though his protagonist, Neil, is telling the story.What I disliked: the entire denouement with all the scenes and flashbacks of John William Barry's parents and the endless monolog of the father. The scene in the lawyer's office and the merciless detail also seem to be filling a page quota rather than telling the story.Overall, yes, I liked this book, but I didn't love it the way I loved "Snow Falling on Cedars" and "East of the Mountains." I think the editor could have helped Guterson trim 50 pages minimum.

Ein Buch das man nicht vergisst

B.W. · May 2, 2019

Eine sehr besondere Geschichte, toll geschrieben und berührend

Five Stars

j.M. · July 8, 2016

Always enjoy this author. Great stuff

Four Stars

M. · October 16, 2016

Classic Guterson! After a fairly slow start,I very soon became engrossed. One not to be missed!

Complicated

C.L. · November 9, 2013

I loved Snow falling over cedar springs so decided to try more of David guterson's books but this one seemed just so complicated. I will persevere with this author as his research is so good

Wer "Into the Wild" von J. Krakauer mochte, wird auch diesen Roman mögen

N. · July 18, 2013

Die Geschichte einer Freundschaft zwischen zwei sehr ungleichen Männern, von denen der eine sich zunehmend aus dem alltäglichen Leben und der Realität verabschiedet.Sehr gut beobachtet und - wie alles von David Guterson - wunderbar geschrieben.

The Other

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