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Kaje Harper's Reviews > Shaking the Sugar Tree

Shaking the Sugar Tree by Nick Wilgus
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it was amazing
bookshelves: favorites, m-m

This book is a refreshing mix of the crazy, the honest, the wildly inappropriate and the deep sweetness of love. This is less a romance than a book about the love of a father for his child. It is the story of survival, because you are just too stubborn and batshit crazy to quit. It is about integrity and recognizing what really counts in life, no matter how it hurts. And it's about holding on to hope, in a corner of your battered heart, no matter how much you convince yourself there is no chance.

Wiley is a long-haired, laid-back gay Southern boy. Once upon a time he had a friend who was a girl, who liked meth and sharing with him. A book he wrote sold well enough to look like a career, and he dropped out of college. Then he decided to try sleeping with the girl, and she got pregnant, and now he has a son.

But this is not one of those typical, fluffy "gay man left with a sweet child finds true love with child-friendly boyfriend" stories. Because Wiley's son Noah isn't some cute plot-muppet. Noah is deaf, has minor birth defects and some developmental delays, and was born addicted to meth. As a newborn, he had to be shot up with drugs so he wouldn't die from the withdrawal. He was born hurting, and angry and unable to understand why. He had tantrums, and screaming fits. He couldn't hear "I love you" or "It will get better". All he understood was touch, and patience, and love that proved itself in dirty diapers and cleaning puke, and day after day of a father doing his best. And a lot of time.

Wiley loves his son, more than anything on Earth. But he has had ten years of hell, interrupted by flashes of pure joy. His girlfriend Kayla took off the moment the baby was born, her parents offered to "take Noah off his hands, if he survived, and raise him in a good, Christian home" and when Wiley insisted on being a father, they washed their hands of both of them. He was left trying to raise a deaf, meth-affected baby with almost no help. His own family chips in sometimes, with hand-me-downs, or a birthday party. But they don't do much day-to-day to support him, and they are ashamed of his gayness, and constantly question his fitness to parent a child. His book sales tanked, and he works minimum wage, to keep the two of them in Ramen noodles and carrot sticks.

Wiley has coped, and even in his own way has thrived. Noah is now ten, knows sign language, mostly sleeps through the night, and loves people. He's a tiny optimist, hoping that someday his mom will love him, and that Iron Man will come to town and make his dad happy and comfortable. Wiley knows he's done well by his boy.

He's managed to keep a sense of humor, although it's become a little black and biting at times, after years of having even his own family put him down. He won't pretend to be straight, and he won't keep his head down and his mouth shut. If his mother gives him a hard time about being gay, he'll take her on straight out, family dinner table or no.
"Mama, why don't you just sew up a Scarlet H and glue it on my forehead?" I asked. "H for the happy homo. Can't we have one conversation that doesn't involve my penis?"
Eli snorted a mouthful of mashed potatoes halfway across the table.


Into his life comes Jackson, a beautiful, gay, male pediatric nurse recently moved down from Boston. Jackson even knows how to sign to Noah. It feels like a glimpse of heaven, or at least Palm Springs. But no one can be as perfect as Jackson seems at first glance. And who would want to take on Wiley with his problems, his mouth, his poverty, crazy grandfather, homophobic family and all? Wiley's dreams of shaking the sugar tree with this guy feel like just that - impossible dreams. And when he's not dreaming he still has his life to live, and his son to love. Fitting in another man, in the homophobic South, is something the next generation may get to do, but Wiley is trying to be content with just keeping his head and Noah's above water. Luckily, Jackson will also have something to say about that. At least, until he reveals his own feet of clay.

I loved this book. Sometimes I was left choking at the things that came out of the characters' mouths into the light of day. Especially the grandfather.
"He's crazy!"
"We don't hide crazy," I said, "We put it on the porch and let it entertain the neighbors."

Which the old man sure does, in a stream-of-consciousness bullshit that is homophobic, misogynistic, paranoid, rude, defamatory, and yet somehow doesn't have the acid to cut deep. It's the words of Wiley's brother, mother, and in-laws that inflict wounds on him. And his line of humor and Southern bullshit charm that he uses to deflect things don't hide the pain he carries around. Unique, brave, honest, foul-mouthed, funny and a bit broken - Wiley is one of the most endearing MCs I've met in a long time. Although there were a few moments of healing that came a bit too easily at the end, I still recommend this book wholeheartedly to anyone who is not easily offended by the words of a crazy old man, or the occasional moral slip on the part of a strong young man swimming hard against a tide of hard times.
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Reading Progress

February 1, 2014 – Shelved as: to-read
February 1, 2014 – Shelved
February 2, 2014 – Started Reading
February 3, 2014 – Shelved as: favorites
February 3, 2014 – Shelved as: m-m
February 3, 2014 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-23 of 23 (23 new)

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message 1: by Kaje (new) - rated it 5 stars

Kaje Harper LOL - no idea.


Venecia It's on Amazon now Rona.


Jerry Great review Kaje!


message 4: by Kaje (last edited 04 fév. 2014 23:22) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Kaje Harper Thanks :)

I might put here too - there is a hint of cheating in the story, but I think it should only bother the most rigid reader. (view spoiler)


Valerie Wonderful review! I loved this book so much! :-)


message 6: by Kaje (new) - rated it 5 stars

Kaje Harper Me too :)


message 7: by E (new) - rated it 5 stars

E Wow great review! I loved this book and haven't written one yet because I know I'll have to sit at a computer to do so, because it'll end up being this long paean to the wonderfulness of this story. Siigghhh... we need more m/m like this.


Alby Krebs I am reading this book, and I really don't want it to end. I am going to check out the mystery series.


message 9: by Susan (new) - rated it 5 stars

Susan Reaves This is a great review but I am glad that I read it after reading the book because I think it robs the reader of the joy of discovery of the book as it unfolds as told by the author. I am a huge fan of yours and just read "The Family We are Born with earlier this week. Best regards.


message 10: by Kaje (new) - rated it 5 stars

Kaje Harper Susan wrote: "This is a great review but I am glad that I read it after reading the book because I think it robs the reader of the joy of discovery of the book as it unfolds as told by the author. I am a huge fa..."

Is there something particular you think needs a spoiler tag?


message 11: by Susan (new) - rated it 5 stars

Susan Reaves I think that such a full retelling with quotes and more than the blurb is a spoiler. But that is just me. I usually wait and read reviews after I read a book because it is almost impossible to review them without spoilers. You don't need to change anything, that was just feedback from my perspective. Others require more info in order to spend the money and take the plunge. I prefer to discover books, characters, plots, subplots as I read. Thank you for asking. Again, I love your works.


message 12: by Kaje (new) - rated it 5 stars

Kaje Harper Ah, yes. If you are spoiler-phobic it's best to be very cautious about reviews here. Everyone has their own standard for how detailed to be.

Those quotes were already out in other reviews/updates, so I figured they might as well be used. I know what you mean though; like having all the best bits of a movie put into the trailer, rather than discovering them in situ. Fortunately there is a lot of other good stuff in this book to discover.

I'm glad you like my writing, thank you :)


message 13: by Kaje (last edited 03 mar. 2014 16:15) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Kaje Harper I checked with the author, to see if he wanted anything in the review tagged. He didn't see specific spoilers that made him wince, so I'm going to leave it at its long-winded appreciation. Hopefully anyone too spoiler-sensitive will skip the longer reviews (a good general rule for avoiding minor spoilers.)

Again, I hope anyone who thinks one of my reviews needs tags please do speak up; I get carried away sometimes in appreciation.


Alex is The Romance Fox Great review Kaje. :)


message 15: by Kaje (new) - rated it 5 stars

Kaje Harper Thanks - I plan to reread this one soon.


Chutchy If I were as eloquent I you are, I would have written a review just like this! Thoroughly enjoyed this book!


message 17: by Kaje (new) - rated it 5 stars

Kaje Harper Isn't this book great? And different, a unique voice, which is so much fun to read.


Chutchy I had never heard of the authour before. Wiley is as cynical and sarcastic as I am! Loved his jokes, but adored Papaw! I'm from the Bahamas and a lot of the southern views are shared there, mainly, putting your crazy front and centre for all to see and hear. We didn't hide them away. It was also refreshing that one could be gay AND still believe in God, which is opposite in most books.


message 19: by Kaje (new) - rated it 5 stars

Kaje Harper Yeah, there are a few books where attitudes are not cookie cutter.

I like that aspect of the Hard Fall series (which is otherwise totally different), that although Joe isn't accepted by his Mormon leadership, he doesn't give up his personal faith.


Chutchy I need to read this! Thanks


message 21: by Bookbee (new) - added it

Bookbee What a great review! The book is now on my wishlist! :)


message 22: by Kaje (last edited 25 juil. 2014 01:53) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Kaje Harper I'm actually rereading it now. I saw it go by on someone's updates and couldn't resist. It's not quite as surprising on a reread but still very good indeed, and different.


Chutchy Already read it again, lol!


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