cover image AMARYLLIS

AMARYLLIS

Craig Crist-Evans, . . Candlewick, $15.99 (184pp) ISBN 978-0-7636-1863-6

Set in the '60s, Crist-Evans's (Moon Over Tennessee: A Boy's Civil War Journal ) painful tale uses metaphors, flashbacks and two forms of narration to describe an American family embattled at home and later caught up in the war in Vietnam. An impressionistic rather than chronological structure signals to readers early on that this book is largely about the emotional impact of experiences that are not easily or immediately understood; however, a literary-minded audience will likely respond to the author's use of imagery. Jimmy, the main character, misses his older brother, Frank, who has shocked everyone by enlisting in the army just after graduating high school—and just after winning their alcoholic, often abusive father's approval for the first time (Frank had risked his own life to rescue a surfer from a shark near the site of the shipwrecked Amaryllis; downed in a hurricane, the Amaryllis looms with varying symbolic values throughout). Meanwhile Frank writes lengthy letters to Jimmy, contrasting the lushness of the tropical jungles with the incomprehensible horrors of war, and alarming Jimmy with descriptions of his growing addiction to heroin. And then the letters stop altogether. Jimmy, like Frank before him, cannot talk to either of his parents, particularly not his father, but the silence from Vietnam finally ignites the family tensions. Teens may relate most readily to the father/son conflicts, but the passages about Vietnam may be what they remember longest. Ages 14-up. (Oct.)