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The House on Tenafly Road (2013)

by Adrienne Morris

Series: Tenafly Road Series (Book One)

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2231,024,225 (4.25)None
When Civil War veteran and morphine-addicted John Weldon marries into the comfortably suburban McCullough family on the eve of Reconstruction and the Indian Wars, life gets complicated. How will Weldon be able to hide his addiction from the family he resents and admires, keep his standing in the army and find the strength to survive the tragedies that come with loving others? The House on Tenafly Road is a rich, layered story about finding family where you least expect it and having the courage to do what's right by the people who love you. John Weldon spends a lifetime journeying across the frontier only to find that he already has a home.… (more)
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The best history stories show us ourselves in a different setting. And so it is with Adrienne Morris’ ambitious novel The House on Tenafly Road. I had expected a nostalgic view of a New Jersey village almost 150 years ago. But what I discovered between the covers was the compelling story of a complicated man whose early circumstances as a mixed race (Delaware Indian and British) child of poverty and his Civil War battle wounds nearly destroy his life and family.

John Weldon is a brave and honorable man, but he knows himself so little. The reader can see that he has the potential to be a true hero, and the girl of his dreams, Katherine McCullough, certainly sees him this way. John comforts others with his impressive knowledge of scripture, but he has lost his own faith.

Believing himself to be undeserving--a weak man for having become addicted to the drug given him by the Army doctor--, he secretly feeds his addiction to morphine. Perhaps John is a classic anti-hero because although the reader watches John’s world crumble around him because of his addiction, the reader desperately wants John to succeed. For the most part, John demonstrates loyalty, courage, and compassion for others, although he is not so generous with himself.

Rather than the main characters building a life in New Jersey, John’s army career soon leads the young family to the wilds of the Arizona Territory. Katherine can no longer be the suburban lady she was raised to be, but must toughen up as an officer’s wife in the most far-flung post she can imagine. John and Katherine raise their two children in a tiny, unadorned cabin. I live in present-day air-conditioned Arizona, and it was exciting to read of the relentless heat, the flora and fauna, and of course, the U.S. Army’s relationship with the native tribes of the region.

The novel is long, but John’s path to redemption is plagued with very realistic setbacks and mistakes, and I hung on to every word, eager to get to the next plot development. In a book this rich and layered, various threads repeatedly surface. For example, as makes sense for a serious book of American history, Morris examines the issue of race—specifically Native American images through the eyes of well-read east coast citizens, through the military, and through John Weldon himself. She doesn’t shy away from controversial topics, such as Weldon’s Indian mother’s alcoholism. Her touch is so deft that while she made my heart break at seeing atrocities against the Apaches through the eyes of the appalled and far-removed Americans back in New Jersey, she also showed me the results of two cultures slamming into one another.

Underlying all lies John’s nasty little secret—the addiction he keeps from his wife. I hadn’t realized that morphine addiction among returning Civil War soldiers was a problem until I read this book and decided to Google it. It’s estimated that a half million men became morphine addicts thanks to their service to our divided country. There were no rehabs and no 12-step programs in those days. Perhaps the only hope that an addict could have would be his faith, and above all, The House on Tenafly Road is about faith. Morris so skillfully weaves questions of faith and love in this epic tale that it isn’t until the end of the book that all stills and clarity emerges.

One final note: the version I read still had some typos and mechanical errors, but the revision has cleaned up these problems, at least according to a spot check that I made, so I chose to give the book 5 stars. ( )
  LuanneCastle | Mar 5, 2022 |
I wouldn't say this was one of the more uplifting books i've read, and yet i let myself get immersed into the lives of the characters, the Weldons and the Mculloughs, as you will too. There is just something about them that is so imperfectly real that it keeps you going thru all 600 + pages. Well, that and the details of military life and society during the post Civil War era ....
The picture on the cover? A needle used for injections...and in this case, morphine. Many of the soldiers who lived, were addicts or alcoholics thru no fault of their own....a sad but true medical statement of the times. And.... its lasting influence is felt throughout the book. ( )
  linda.marsheells | Feb 11, 2015 |
This review was written by the author.
After his service in the Civil War, Sergeant John Weldon, haunted and nearly shattered by his experiences on and off the battlefield (which left him with lingering acute pain and a morphine addiction), makes his way to the picturesque new village of Englewood in New Jersey at the invitation of the spirited and welcoming McCullough family. He falls in love with the daughter of the house, fiercely intelligent and compassionate Kate, but he’s traumatized by the war and its aftereffects, and in the course of a long and very satisfyingly complex novel, Morris throws dozens of obstacles in the path of their relationship (including some extremely evocative flashbacks of Weldon’s war memories).

The various members of the McCullough family are portrayed with careful detail and some moments of unexpected humor, but it’s the tortured John Weldon who commands the book; his slow and halting search for personal redemption makes for mesmerizing reading. Recommended. Steve Donoghue Historical Novel Society EDITORS" CHOICE PICK ( )
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  adriennemorris | Jan 4, 2014 |
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When Civil War veteran and morphine-addicted John Weldon marries into the comfortably suburban McCullough family on the eve of Reconstruction and the Indian Wars, life gets complicated. How will Weldon be able to hide his addiction from the family he resents and admires, keep his standing in the army and find the strength to survive the tragedies that come with loving others? The House on Tenafly Road is a rich, layered story about finding family where you least expect it and having the courage to do what's right by the people who love you. John Weldon spends a lifetime journeying across the frontier only to find that he already has a home.

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When morphine-addicted Civil War veteran John Weldon marries into the comfortably suburban McCullough family on the eve of Reconstruction and the Indian Wars, life gets complicated. How will Weldon hide his addiction from the family he resents and admires, keep his standing in the army and find the strength to survive the tragedies that come with loving others? John Weldon spends a lifetime journeying across the frontier only to find that he already has a home.

*Historical Novel Society Editors' Choice

“The various members of the McCullough family are portrayed with careful detail and some moments of unexpected humor, but it’s the tortured John Weldon who commands the book; his slow and halting search for personal redemption makes for mesmerizing reading.

. . . extremely evocative.

. . . a long and very satisfyingly complex novel. “

Steve Donoghue
Haiku summary
Soldier loves morphine
Family loves the addict
Addict chooses love.

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Adrienne Morris is a LibraryThing Author, an author who lists their personal library on LibraryThing.

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