<p>What would drive easy-going likable Jim Hutchins to pick up a twelve-gauge and head for his sworn enemy? The IRS threatening to garnish his mechanic&rsquo;s wages? His kids providing the police department full-time employment? His grief-sodden wife making money by dancing naked for his brother-in-law? Better ask what&rsquo;s kept him from picking it up before&mdash;His wits? His keen insights into human pretension? His wry sense of humor? His rough-hewn knowledge of the human heart? Tension rules until the end as &ldquo;The Suburbs of Heaven balances heartbreak and black comedic hilarity.&rdquo; (Newsday.)<br />&ldquo;Biting ribald ... engaging characters... What gives The Suburbs of Heaven much of its charm are the voices of its narrators the five Hutchinses. Each of them is endowed with a similar blunt and idiosyncratic eloquence.&rdquo;&mdash;The New York Times Book Review.<br />&ldquo;At last New Hampshire has her Faulkner. This powerful and disturbing novel chronicles the hardscrabble lives of the Hutchins clan and their colorful compelling neighbors. Here&rsquo;s a tale of betrayal and loss ignorance and poverty. Merle Drown knows that what&rsquo;s important is the exploration of the human heart in conflict with itself.&rdquo;&mdash;John Dufresne author of Love Warps the Mind a Little</p>