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Tree of Heaven

One of the most heart-breaking of all World War I novels, this family epic was written in the midst of the War itself, and shows the intense emotion generated in ordinary lives by that tragedy. May Sinclair astonishingly weaves multiple themes into her narrative, seamlessly drawing from the great movements of her day: suffrage, sexual liberation, artistic revolt, war, and pacifism. Her most powerful metaphor throughout the novel is that of the Vortex: the dangerously irresistible force of human masses, how to resist it and (much more difficult) how to participate in it without losing one’s individual autonomy. - Summary by Expatriate (10 hr 3 min)

Chapters

Part I (Peace): Chapter 01

Part I (Peace): Chapter 02

Part I (Peace): Chapter 03

Part I (Peace): Chapter 04

Part I (Peace): Chapter 05

Part I (Peace): Chapter 06

Part I (Peace): Chapter 07

Part I (Peace): Chapter 08

Part I (Peace): Chapter 09

Part I (Peace): Chapter 10

Part II (The Vortex): Chapter 11

Part II (The Vortex): Chapter 12

Part II (The Vortex): Chapter 13

Part II (The Vortex): Chapter 14

Part II (The Vortex): Chapter 15

Part II (The Vortex): Chapter 16

Part II (The Vortex): Chapter 17

Part III (Victory): Chapter 18

Part III (Victory): Chapter 19

Part III (Victory): Chapter 20

Part III (Victory): Chapter 21

Part III (Victory): Chapter 22

Part III (Victory): Chapter 23

Part III (Victory): Chapter 24

Part III (Victory): Chapter 25