Ordinary Grace

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Ordinary Grace
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(as of Mar 28, 2025 12:25:02 UTC – Details)


Award-winning author William Kent Krueger has gained an immense fan base for his Cork O’Connor series. In Ordinary Grace, Krueger looks back to 1961 to tell the story of Frank Drum, a boy on the cusp of manhood. A typical 13-year-old with a strong, loving family, Frank is devastated when a tragedy forces him to face the unthinkable – and to take on a maturity beyond his years.

Customers say

Customers find the book well-written and engaging. They describe the story as meaningful and memorable, with complex characters and thought-provoking moments. The narrative style is evocative and brings them back to their own childhoods. Many readers find the book sad and heart wrenching, causing tears and laughter. The skillful presentation of the details creates an emotional connection.

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8 reviews for Ordinary Grace

  1. Bonnie Brody

    Far From an Ordinary Book
    Ordinary Grace by William Kent Krueger is anything but an ordinary book. It is filled with wonderful insight, characters that you grow to know like your own friends, lives that are rich and bountiful, despair and heartbreak, and spiritual wisdom that takes a place in your heart.
    The book is narrated by Frank Drum in the year 2001. It is about his memories of one summer in his life 40 years ago.
    Frank Drum is thirteen years old and a bit of a rebel. He is the son of a minister and a mother who loves music and did not plan to be married to a minister. Originally, his father had planned to be a lawyer but the experiences of war changed this. It is the summer of 1961 and Frank lives in the small town of Bremen, Minnesota where his father has his primary parish.
    Jake is Frank’s younger brother who is wise beyond his years. He has a stuttering problem and does not like to speak much. People often think he’s simple but he is very smart and observant.
    Both boys are very independent and incredibly adventurous though they are also respectful of adults. They go to three church services each Sunday because their father conducts the services at three small community churches each week. Their mother runs the choir.
    The book is about many things but it centers primarily on the coming-of-age of Frank Drum. The story opens with death – the death of a young boy on the railroad tracks. He was known as being simple-minded and the town is not sure whether he was murdered or just did not pay attention to the oncoming train. It is followed by the death of an itinerant man who is found by Frank. Further deaths follow and the boys try to get their heads around all this loss.
    Frank and Jake spend a lot of the book trying to make sense out of death and despair as there is a lot of this in the telling of the story. While Jake has a deep faith in God, Frank is not a believer. As he says, “In his sermons my father often talked about trusting God and trusting that no matter how alone we might feel God was always with us. In all that terrible waiting I didn’t feel the presence of God, not one bit. I prayed but unlike my father who seemed to believe that he was being heard, I felt as if I was talking to the air. Nothing came to me in return.”
    I thought a lot about the title of this book. Augustinian Grace is a beautiful thing, a rare gift from God to the chosen few. The Grace that Frank’s father talks about is a heavy `gift’. “There was a playwright, Son, a Greek by the name of Aeschylus. He wrote that he who learns must suffer. And even in our sleep pain, which cannot forget, falls drop by drop upon the heart, until, in our own despair, against our will, comes wisdom through the awful grace of God.” To Frank’s father, grace arrives from God and through the pain of grace comes wisdom.
    This is a novel that is filled with spirituality, philosophy and wonderful characterizations. The people I met will stay with me a long time and this will be a book that I will not soon forget.

  2. Susan Goewey

    Comforting lessons revealed via interesting characters, relationships, and story-telling in small town USA, 1961
    I read this as assigned reading for a book group of fellow moms who have special needs children. I found it engrossing and, at times, difficult to read due to the emotions it brought forth (especially regarding certain characters with “special needs” who, in the early 1960s, were disparaged as “retarded”). The book is reminscent of To Kill A Mockingbird (the father is a hero, there are several Boo Radleys), the narrator looks back 40 years later with perspective, but places you in the action of the past. It reminded me also of the movie Stand by Me in that it is a coming of age story of 2 young brothers, both of whom I came to love quickly.
    The author insightfully describes flawed characters and families and the dynamics and weakness/strengths of families and the thin line between characters pulling together in love and becoming stronger and/or completely falling apart in their unhappiness due to circumstances beyond their control and the dangers of taking others down with them.
    It is a sad, but redemptive tale. [I would give the book 5 stars (meaning “I loved it” rather than “I liked it” 4 star) except for the fact that it was so emotionally wrenching for me personally to read as it deals with so much death/loss in just 1 year and, similarly I am still grieving the loss of my own brother, father, and mother in law in a similar time frame. Still I feel I gained comfort and insight from it.]
    It offers many parables that boil down to death is a part of life, tho some of those deaths are much, much harder to accept than others, we do and it is human nature to seek escapes and even laugh shortly after tragedy, to lesson our pain. There are many brilliant passages that belong on sympathy cards and in funeral services. Without giving any spoilers, I’d like to quote wise words from one greiving character trying to comfort others at the funeral of one of the story’s “Mockingbirds” felled that I found, in the context of the stories surrounding it, particularly moving:
    “When we feel abandoned, alone, and lost, what’s left to us? What do I have, what do you have, what do any of us have left except the overpowering temptation to rail against God and to blame him for the dark night into which he’s led us, to blame him for our misery, to blame him and cryout against him for not caring? What’s left to us when that which we love most has been taken?
    “I will tell you what’s left, three profound blessings…faith, hope, and love. These gifts, which are the foundation of eternity, God has given to us and he’s given us complete control over them. Even in the darkest night it’s still within our power to hold to faith. We can still embrace hope. And although we may ourselves feel unloved, we can still stand steadfast in our love for others and for God. All this is in our control. God gave us these gifts and he does not thake them back. It is we who choose to discard them.
    “In your dark night, I urge you to hold to your faith, to embrace hope, and to bear your love before you like a burning candle, for I promise that it will light your way. And whether you believe in miracles or not…you will experience one. It may not be the miracle you’ve prayed for. God probably won’t undo what’s been done. The miracle is this: that you will rise in the morning and be able to see again the startling beauty of the day.
    “Jesus suffered the dark night and death and on the third day he rose again through the grace of his loving father. For each of us, the sun sets and the sun also rises and through the grace of our Lord we can endure our own dark night and rise to the dawning of a new day and rejoice…in the beauty of this morning which he has given us.”
    Rereading those words out of context, I guess they could come out of any pulpit on any given Sunday, but within the novel the words were quite moving to me, much like Atticus’ closing arguments. In short, Ordinary Grace offers wise lessons revealed through interesting characters and relationships. The engrossing story could take place in any small town USA back in 1961. It is refreshing to be placed in the “simpler” times many are nostalgic for (forgetting the awful prejudices of many toward Native Americans, the disabled, and homosexuals), if for no other reason than it is devoid of cell phones and computers and so many modern day distractions. The author paints a believable portrait full of bologna sandwiches, “jello salads” as well as forgotten chores like ironing. His peaceful descriptions include gardens, the natural beauty of a flowing river but also the excitement and tension of railroad tracks and trellises and believable characters capable of drama, secrets, prejudices and injustices–as well as compassion, love, forgiveness and the necessary acceptance of “the awful grace of God.”

  3. R. R. Williams

    A Gracious and Heartfelt Coming-of-Age Story
    William Kent Kreuger’s Ordinary Grace is undoubtedly deserving of 5 stars. This is my first book by Krueger, and his writing is nothing short of beautiful, with prose that flows gracefully throughout. This is one of those books where the story—and especially the characters—will stay with me in my thoughts for a long time to come.
    Coming-of-age novels of this caliber are rare, and Ordinary Grace stands out as a prime example. Set in 1961, the story is narrated by Frank Drum, reflecting on the summer events four decades later. Krueger masterfully evokes the atmosphere of a small Minnesota town, populated with characters you quickly come to know and care about.
    The novel explores themes of tragedy, controversy, and miracles in a way that’s both poignant and heartfelt. It’s one of those books that stirs deep emotions—whether sadness, joy, friendship, judgment, or loss—and that’s where it truly shines.
    The ending moved me to tears, particularly during the epilogue. I saw another reviewer criticize the book for being too obvious with the identity of the killer early on, but I disagree entirely. I found the revelation at the end to be surprising, and I was way off in my predictions about the perpetrator.
    I highly recommend Ordinary Grace and it’s likely to be one of my top reads of 2025, if not my number one. I’ve already started This Tender Land by Krueger, and I can’t help but draw comparisons between his style and that of Dennis Lehane. Both authors excel at immersing readers in a specific time and place, making their settings feel as alive and important as the characters themselves.

  4. MEB

    Although this book starts slowly, with a somewhat protracted account of the boys’ childhood activities, it picks up pace after the first third or so and then develops into a really worthwhile read. Krueger’s prose is exquisite, his characters well-developed and the story skilfully crafted. You would have to be seriously asleep on the job not to work out the supposed ‘revelation’ in the final chapter long before it comes, but discerning whodunnit several chapters before the end does not diminish the pleasure of reading on. That is due to Krueger’s writing skills and to the level of affection the reader has by then developed for the main characters.
    The frequent reflections proffered in the text are sincere, thought-provoking and mature. I found the book quite beautiful in parts and overall a really impressive piece of work. Far less worthy texts have taken home the glittering prizes of the literary world – this novel is like William’s ‘Stoner’ and Savage’s ‘The Power of the Dog’, a literary gem that deserves more acclaim that it has garnered to date, it is one of those books you press upon your friends to read. Loved it.

  5. Linda Pfeiffer

    How I adored this masterful piece of literature. The writing was sublime, the story was enthralling and the whole book was unforgettable. As an avid reader of over 65 books a year, I read many novels that are quickly forgotten as soon as I finish the last page, but I know that this one is a life lesson for me. Perhaps it’s because Frank Drum, our protagonist, was thirteen in 1961 which puts us in the same general age group, or that he grew up in a place where it wasn’t necessary to lock the door, as I did, or his two parents were very different from each other, but stayed married until death did them part which happened in my life too. So obviously I identified with him and the time. A time before devices or cell phones and social media. A time when a new, young president with a beautiful wife and small children occupied the white house. Then Frank meets the grim reaper nearly face to face when several deaths occur in his idyllic setting. All the characters in this book are real to me. This book almost seems autobiographical. This is the coming of age year for Frank Drum and the lessons he learned carried with him forever as he explains later in the book which is forty years on. This is not solely a murder mystery. The story lingers on long after you finish the last page.

  6. Amazon Kunde

    Absolutely loved the book and so did my book club. Great characters and characters development. A combination of Bildungsroman and murder mystery.

  7. 新しもの好き

    いつもの森林保安官の話しかと手にしたらまったく新しいタッチの珠玉の作品に出会えた。1961年、ミネソタの閑静な田舎町で13歳の僕「フランク」は弟「ジェイク」と18歳の姉「アリエル」の3人で優しい牧師の父「ネイサン」と聖歌隊を指揮する母「ルース」のもとで町の人たちから可愛がられながらちょっぴり大人の仲間にいれてもらったりして楽しい日々を過ごしていた。11歳の「ボビー」が列車に轢かれて死亡しているのがみつかり、保安官「ドイル」が捜査にあたるが、僕を大人並みに扱ってくれる父の友人「ガス」黒人「ワレン・レッドストーン」や盲目の「エミール・ブラント」、そして姉のボーイフレンド「カール」などが絡んで次々に事件が起き、腰巾着のジェイクと一緒にミネソタ川の周りを歩き回る。13歳の子がビールを飲んだり大人っぽい推理行動をするのが日本的には珍しく、ハックルベリーの世界だなあ、と感心する。「僕」の一人称で語られ、最後の数ページで40年後の今、年老いた父と故郷への再訪で切ない想い出を振り返るという、重い内容を子供の目線で優しく描いた、本をおくのが勿体ないぐらいの余韻を貰った。

  8. Kjane

    This is a very beautifully written book about a boy coming of age and discovering all is not well in the world. Frank Drum is the son of a small town pastor in the early 1960’s. He has an older sister Ariel and a younger brother Jake who is afflicted with a stutter.
    Frank’s safe world is shaken by the death of another child. This leads to he and his brother discovering the dead body of an itinerant man and a chain of events kicks off. There are some very complex characters including his father’s friend Gus with whom he shares the horrors of a war they would rather forget, and Emil Brandt, the former boyfriend of Frank’s mother who was scarred and blinded by the war.
    This is not a fast moving whodunnit, this is a slowly revealed mystery that is more about the impact on lives than solving a crime. It is about love and forgiveness.
    If you are a fan of To Kill a Mockingbird then I am sure you will love this too.

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