53 pages 1 hour read

Pines

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 2012

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Symbols & Motifs

Pine Trees

Throughout the novel, the pines that comprise the deep, dark forest surrounding Wayward Pines symbolize escape and safety to Ethan—escape from the world of Wayward Pines, which he doesn’t understand, and safety from the sheriff and others in the town who seem determined to imprison him. When Ethan finally does escape, the trees offer refuge, as Ethan knows he has “some protection under the canopies of these ancient pines” (201). Beyond refuge, the trees also offer a marked contrast to Wayward Pines’s man-made perfection: “He passed into a grove of soaring pines. The rocky ground gave way to soft, moist earth covered in a cushion of dead pine needles” (201). In addition, by situating Wayward Pines amid the pine forest, Blake Crouch evokes a similar sense of isolation and mystery as that evoked in the television show Twin Peaks, in which a small town with dark secrets is also set amid pine forests that create a supernatural atmosphere.