It was the summer of 1993, and my husband and I were taking our first road trip south on the legendary Pacific Coast Highway, starting our drive in San Francisco and ending in Los Angeles. Our rental car clung to the outside lane of the highway winding up into Big Sur and dipping down to rocky beaches where seals and sea lions sunned themselves. But even as I exclaimed over the natural beauty unspooling before us, I was itching to reach whatever cabin or motel we’d booked for the night, so that I could pick up Donna Tartt’s “The Secret History” and dive in where I’d left off.
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Review | ‘The God of the Woods’ should be your next summer mystery
Tartt’s best-selling debut novel had recently come out in paperback, and it was my “vacation read” — more like “vacation immersion.” The eerie atmosphere of that novel so affected my mood that, forevermore, California redwoods have been conflated in my mind with the dark forest surrounding a small Vermont college where a fictional murder occurred.
This summer, I once again felt that all-too-rare sense of being completely possessed by a story as I read “The God of the Woods,” by Liz Moore. There are some superficial similarities between the two novels: Both are intricate narratives featuring young people isolated in enclosed worlds — in Tartt’s story, a small cohort of classics students at the aforementioned college (modeled on Bennington); in Moore’s, a summer camp within a vast forest in New York’s Adirondack Mountains. A sense of predetermined doom also pervades both books. But the most vital connection for me is the beguiling force of these two literary suspense novels. For those susceptible to its pull, “The God of the Woods,” like “The Secret History,” transports readers so deeply into its richly peopled, ominous world that, for hours, everything else falls away.
There’s more than a touch of Gothic excess about “The God of The Woods,” beginning with the premise that not one, but two children from the wealthy Van Laar family have disappeared 14 years apart. When the novel opens in August 1975, an Emerson Camp counselor discovers that 13-year-old Barbara Van Laar is missing from her bunk. Barbara was conceived after the disappearance of her brother in 1961. Peter “Bear” Van Laar, a boy as playful and adventurous as his nickname, was 8 when he vanished from “Self-Reliance,” the Van Laar’s summer house that adjoins the camp. (The cosseted Van Laar family clearly has a weakness for referencing — if not internalizing — the do-it-yourself gospel of transcendentalist Ralph Waldo Emerson.) The surrounding woods and nearby Lake Joan were searched exhaustively, but no trace of the beloved Bear was ever found. Coincidentally, at the time of both disappearances, a convicted serial killer was spotted traipsing around the area. This fiend, named Jacob Sluiter, informally known as “Slitter,” belongs to an old family who once owned the land holdings that became the Van Laar Preserve.
To summarize the plot of “The God of the Woods,” thusly, risks making this nuanced literary suspense novel sound like a campfire tale generated by AI. (A serial killer! Terrified campers lost in the woods!) Rather than a straightforward sensational yarn, Moore’s story jumps around non-sequentially from the 1950s through the 1970s and is crowded with characters: campers, counselors, the Van Laars and their tony houseguests, townspeople and local police. Throughout, Moore’s language is unflaggingly precise. Here’s her omniscient narrator describing a girl named Tracy, Barbara’s bunkmate, who suffers from low self-esteem. And, little wonder why:
“[Tracy’s] father once told her casually that she was built like a plum on toothpicks, and the phrase was at once so cruel and so poetic that it clicked into place around her like a harness.”
As wise as it is about the vulnerability of adolescence, “The God of the Woods” is also chillingly astute about the invisible boundaries demarcating social class. Take, for instance, the character of Judyta “Judy” Luptack, a 26-year-old woman from a working-class Polish American family who’s been newly promoted to “junior investigator” on the otherwise all-male police team searching for Barbara. Stationed inside the Van Laar mansion, Judy has the increasingly urgent need “to pee”:
“She’s not certain what procedure is. Nowhere in her training did she come across this exact scenario: What do you do if you’re in someone’s private home for hours and hours with no access to the outside world? Rich people especially. She doesn’t want to ask these people for anything. If she were a man, she’d [go] in the woods.”
Moore’s superb 2020 crime novel, “Long Bright River,” went deep into issues of addiction and entrenched poverty while exploring the opioid crisis in Philadelphia; “The God of the Woods” heads off into different territory — weird and uncanny — and yet, it too offers strong social criticism. As it unfolds, “The God of the Woods” becomes more and more focused on how its female characters break free — or don’t — of the constraints of their time and social class. Whatever the case, breaking free of the spell Moore casts is close to impossible.
Maureen Corrigan, who is the book critic for the NPR program “Fresh Air,” teaches literature at Georgetown University.
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Storm Team4 Forecast: More highs in the 90s, rain chances later
4 things to know about the weather:
- Summer sizzle
- A bit humid Saturday
- Isolated weekend storms
- Cooler early next week
Saturday comes with a steady increase in clouds and a chance for some scattered storms after sunset and into the overnight hours. Rain chances will peak at barely 30% from 9 p.m. Saturday until 7 a.m. Sunday, as a cold front slides through the area.
The cooler air will lag a bit behind the front, so Sunday temperatures will still climb to around 90°. The difference you’ll feel Sunday will be a steady drop in humidity levels, thanks to a northwest breeze.
Much more pleasant weather is still on track for early next week. Monday and Tuesday will both be sunny and seasonably warm, with highs in the low 80s and overnight lows in the 50s for everywhere but the urban centers.
Hotter and more humid weather is expected later next week. No widespread rain is in the forecast, but afternoon storms will be much more common, so spotty drought relief is at least a possibility.
Download the NBC Washington app on iOS and Android to check the weather radar on the go.
QuickCast
SATURDAY:
Partly cloudy, hot
Breezy afternoon
Late evening shower possible
Wind: southwest 12-22 mph
Chance of rain: 20%
Highs: 90° to 95°
SUNDAY:
Mostly cloudy, hot
Scattered storms possible
Wind: northwest 5-15 mph
Chance of rain: 30%
Highs: 88° to 92°
MONDAY:
Sunny skies
Cooler
Definitely less humid
Wind: east 10-18 mph
Chance of rain: 0%
Highs: 78° to 84°
Sunrise: 5:44 a.m. // Sunset: 8:30 p.m.
Average High: 82° // Average Low: 64°
Stay with Storm Team4 for the latest forecast. Download the NBC Washington app on iOS and Android to get severe weather alerts on your phone.
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WA cannabis market faces pressure from federal changes and oversupply
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Washington Nationals’ 5-Tool Star James Wood Is Turning Heads
CLEVELAND, OHIO – MAY 26: James Wood #29 of the Washington Nationals celebrates after hitting a two-run homer during the second inning against the Cleveland Guardians at Progressive Field on May 26, 2026, in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Jason Miller/Getty Images)
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Washington Nationals slugger, James Wood, doesn’t get the credit he deserves.
But he’s turning heads. Opponents fear him. Fans love to watch him play.
The left-handed hitting Wood, only 23, is a clear 5-tool Major League Baseball player. He won’t turn 24 until September 17.
Wood hits for power, has a respectable batting average, has excellent speed, plays good defense, and has a strong throwing arm. Five tools.
Wood is getting every inch of power from his large, 6-6, 234 pound frame.
Not only has Wood hit 16 home rus so far this season, and he has walked 51 times in his 294 plate appearances.
At the start of play Friday June 5, Wood has compiled a very impressive stat line of .264.401.527/.929.
The Nationals have surprised plenty of MLB teams with their consistent power display, their excellent hard contact and extra base hit skills, and their overall offensive performance.
James Wood is a special player for the Washington Nationals.
It would not be out of question to see the Nationals claim a spot in the competitive National League playoffs.
Wood is clearly the leader of the surging Nationals.
Washington Nationals’ James Wood in action during a baseball game against the New York Mets, Thursday, May 21, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Nick Wass)
Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. Wood hits in the leadoff position for Washington, and he sets the table for the team’s lineup. Using excellent hand-eye coordination, good pitch recognition, and an appropriately aggressive approach at the plate, Wood is a dangerous leadoff bat.
Wood has the ability to foul off plenty of pitches, until he finds the pitch he can drive.
In a series against the Cleveland Guardians May 25-27, Wood hit two home runs, while collecting eight hits in 12 plate appearances.
After the second game of the series, the Toronto Star said this: …”Wood’s towering, 401 foot drive to right field was his 15th homer of the season, and second in as many days…Wood leads the majors with 49 runs and ranks third with 29 extra-base hits.”
Wood was a 2nd round pick of the San Diego Padres n the 2021 Major League Baseball draft. He was chosen out of MG Academy in Bradenton, Florida. Wood’s signing bonus was equivalent to the slot value of a first round pick.
Wood’s signing bonus encouraged him to sign with the Padres, as opposed to completing his plan to attend Mississippi State University.
LOS ANGELES, CA – JULY 18: Juan Soto #22 of the Washington Nationals holds the T-Mobile Home Run Derby Championship Trophy and wears the championship chain as he poses for a photo with Bad Bunny after winning the final round during the T-Mobile Home Run Derby at Dodger Stadium on Monday, July 18, 2022 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Mary DeCicco/MLB Photos via Getty Images)
MLB Photos via Getty Images Wood never played for the San Diego Padres. He was traded to Washington in a blockbuster deal that sent budding star Juan Soto to the Padres.
As Baseballreference.com noted, in that August 2, 2022 transaction, the Padres sent Wood, shortstop CJ Abrams, pitcher MacKenzie Gore, outfielder Robert Hassell III, right-handed pitcher Jarlin Susana, and first baseman Luke Voit to Washington for Soto, and first baseman Josh Bell. It was the type of franchise-changing deal the Padres were noted for at the time.
Of course, Soto now plays for the New York Mets, and Wood is thriving as the team-leader of the Nationals.
Wood is only in his third year with Washington, and there is no telling how much more impact he will have when he reaches his baseball prime. That’s still some four years away, and already, Wood is busting fences, stealing bases, making outstanding defensive catches, and playing the game with passion.
Wood was an All Star for the National in 2025, when he hit .256/.350/.475/.825, with 31 home runs, and 94 RBIs in 689 plate appearances. He stole 15 bases.
The only blemish on Wood’s 2025 production, was his 221 strikeouts. He walked 85 times. While there is swing-and-miss in his game, Wood appears to have improved his contact this season.
Wood has also exercised good pitch selection, as his walk rate is climbing.
Wood has plenty of raw power, but an inside the park, grand slam home run he hit against the Mets May 19 exemplifies the type of season Wood is having. Here is a comment about Wood’s homer on msn.com, “Wood hit a Statcast measured 29.4 feet per second sprint speed. The Nationals Park crowd was on its feet, sensing something special.” The homer never left the park.
The Washington Nationals now find themselves with a highly competitive, highly entertaining team. Finally. They have waited a long time for this type of excitement in Washington.
5-Tool star James Wood is just the type of player to lead the Washington Nationals to great success in this 2026 MLB season.About Washington Nationals James Wood:
As noted by MLBtraderumors.com at the time he sighed with the Padres, Wood received a massive $2.6M signing bonus from San Diego as the No. 62 player taken in the draft. That 62nd slot value was listed at $1.1M.The San Diego Padres Traded James Wood to the Washington Nationals:
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