Yes, she endured struggles and disappointments in her life, but her depression is a disease independent of tangible stressors. Leigh’s mother’s death is portrayed as a terrible effect of a mental illness. Pan’s treatment of suicide is honest, respectful, and complex. Her daily life has ricocheted between a sweet will-they-won’t-they crush on her best friend, Axel, and coping with the effects of her mother’s worsening depression. The narrative jumps between Leigh’s visit with her grandparents and her memories of the last few years at home. Pan unspools family secrets and the complexities of grief with lush imagery (both realistic and otherworldly) and character-driven storytelling. In THE ASTONISHING COLOR OF AFTER, a New York Timesbestseller and Indie Next List Pick, debut author Emily X. Leigh has never met them, but now she must, if she wants to see the bird again. And the bird wants her to take these artifacts to her grandparents in Taiwan, grandparents from whom her mother had been estranged for decades. Then one night, the bird delivers a box full of artifacts from her mother’s past. In the long, quiet aftermath of her mother’s suicide, Leigh craves her presence. She’s seen her, a majestic red bird with a huge wingspan, on the doorstep late at night. Leigh Chen Sanders knows her mother is a bird.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |