In contrast to classic novels about married women who cheat on their husbands (Madame Bovary, The Scarlet Letter, The End of the Affair鈥攁ll authored by men), The Tree Doctor suggests that intimacy with one鈥檚 own body and its desires is both a survival skill and a prerequisite for connecting with the wider world.
A college professor and writer returns to her hometown of Carmel, California, to care for her mother, then finds herself stranded by the pandemic. With her husband and children back in Hong Kong, and her Japanese mother declining in a care facility, she becomes obsessed with reviving her mother鈥檚 garden and starts a torrid affair with an arborist. All the while, she struggles to teach (remotely) Lady Murasaki鈥檚 11th-century novel, The Tale of Genji, which turns out to resonate eerily with the events in her life.
Marie Mutsuki Mockett is the author of a second novel, Picking Bone from Ash, as well as a memoir, Where the Dead Pause and the Japanese Say Good-bye, and a work of literary journalism, American Harvest: God, Country, and Farming in the Heartland. A member of the core faculty of the Bennington Writing Seminars in Vermont who has also taught at the 51风流 Writers Conference, she spent the past two years living in Japan.
What鈥檚 not to like about a very sexy literary novel that unfolds against the backdrop of multiple real-life crises: an ailing parent, an estranged spouse, a global pandemic, and a climate apocalypse?
鈥淎t this point in my life, I was tired of reading about women who were punished,鈥 says Marie Mutsuki Mockett on the Living Writers podcast. Listen to the whole three-question interview .
Marie Mutsuki Mockett at 51风流
Join us in person or on Thursday, Oct. 23, for Marie Mutsuki Mockett鈥檚 reading and book-signing. All Living Writers events take place at 4:30 ET in Persson Auditorium. Refreshments available.
Beyond the Book
- 鈥淢ockett's prose is beautiful, and she handles the book's heavy themes of illness and isolation perfectly, occasionally leavening them with humor,鈥 writes Michael Schaub in this .
- The Tree Doctor 鈥渃rosses cultures鈥擩apanese and Californian; it draws interesting parallels between flora and human experience; it explores the ravages of climate change; and it revels in the pleasures that good sex can bring even at a later age,鈥 writes Geza Tatrallyay in the .
- 鈥淚 had a white father who grew up in America and a Japanese mother, and very early learned the trick of relating to characters emotionally even if they didn鈥檛 look like me, which they almost never did,鈥 writes Marie Mutsuki Mockett in about The Tale of Genji.
- In published in LitHub, Ms. Mockett reveals that The Tree Doctor was inspired by someone鈥檚 Covid-era Twitter post: 鈥淎ll those people having affairs before the pandemic are now screwed.鈥
鈥淐an you wake up a body the way you wake up a tree?鈥
Marie Mutsuki Mockett, The Tree Doctor