UNIVERSAL HARVESTER
Fiction Desperate cries muffled UNIVERSAL HARVESTER By John Darnielle 224 pp. Farrar, Straus and Giroux Reviewed by Sarah Corbett Morgan Jeremy works at the Video Hut in Nevada (pronounced Nev-ay-da), Iowa. It’s the sort of store where we rented VHS tapes back in the ’90s before the advent of Hulu, HBO, and other streaming services. Things are pretty low-key in Nevada, as well as at his job, but one afternoon a woman returns one of the tapes and says, “There’s something on this one.” And so begins John Darnielle’s second novel, Universal Harvester, a beautiful, haunting, and at times creepy story full of loss. It takes Jeremy a while, but he finally gets around to watching the film at home where he lives with his dad, Steve. His mom died in a car wreck some years before, and the two grown men share a pleasant enough bachelor’s life. Steve does suggest to his son from time to time that there might be better opportunities for employment beyond the Video Hut. While...