"Five Skies," Ron Carlson's exquisitely crafted and spiritually resonant novel about three emotionally-damaged men who discover themselves while working on a construction project in remote Idaho, illustrates the power of literary epiphany. The three protagonists initially know little of each other, each recognizing that the two others hold devastating secrets, unspoken pain and unalloyed confusion as to life's ultimate purpose. Carlson is little short of brilliant as he illuminates the hidden recesses of the human heart and draws the reader into the most important project the men are responsible for achieving: self-understanding. "Five Skies" is both moving and powerful; the novel has an integrity and dignity as broad as the expansive Idaho skies and as deep as the gorge near which his protagonists labor.
Foreman Darwin Gallegos impulsively hires two day laborers, Arthur Key and Ronnie Panelli, to help him build a stunt ramp. The summer-long project essentially isolates the three men and forces them to come to grips with the forces that drove them to such a location. Panelli is a two-bit juvenile delinquent, bewildered and ashamed at his criminal record and broken life. Gallegos flees from the shattering grief engendered by his wife's unexpected death; he is a human wreck -- angry, numb and frustrated. Key, who becomes the central character in the novel, is an over-sized, hands-on engineer, capable of visualizing a project and painstakingly careful so that every detail is in place. He is overwhelmed by guilt and shame, and Key's remorse eventually becomes the engine that fuels each character's journey to self-recognition and acceptance.
Integral to Carlson's treatment of epiphany is silence. Each protagonist struggles with language; often they find it impossible to articulate their anguish. Although Key senses that Gallegos would be a compassionate listener, the former takes weeks before finding the capability of speaking his heart. Then there is the awesome silence of Idaho's spellbinding environment. The gorge is so enormous; its sounds dwarf human voice and its deceiving perspectives mock human attempts to contain or control nature. Finally, there are the silences of the lengthy summer days spent at work, where unspoken companionship ultimately yields lasting relationships, and the vast silence of night, where star-splashed skies illuminate secrets and unleash constricted emotions.
"Five Skies" is no simple band-of-brothers adventure story. Spare and direct, this is a robust, trenchant novel, and Ron Carlson knows enough about torment to permit his characters to discover their own paths. As each man gains the moral courage to face himself, as the men slowly turn toward each other instead of away from their pain, the novel ascends its own heights. By its conclusion, "Five Skies" reaffirms our belief in human dignity.