The first thing that struck me about A Harvest of Furies by Hayden Casey was its ambition. This contemporary retelling of Aeschylus’s Oresteia brings ancient themes of guilt, vengeance, and divine punishment into a modern Midwestern setting—an inspired concept that could have easily collapsed under its own weight. Yet, for much of the novel, Casey manages to sustain that tension between the mythic and the mundane, between the haunted family home and the echoes of war that ripple through its walls.

The story centers on siblings Orrie and Emma, whose family has been cursed for generations. When their father, Aggie, returns home from war a changed man, the fragile normalcy they’ve built begins to unravel. Secrets surface, deaths follow, and before long, the house itself seems alive with voices—echoes of both the past and the family’s own unraveling sanity.
Continue reading “A Harvest of Furies by Hayden Casey reimagines ancient tragedy in the American heartland”