Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
As this unsettling fable begins, Joseph, a solitary, retired widower, is hoeing his garden when he discovers 10 gnomelike, bald, mushroom-colored creatures, each of them one foot tall. Growing in soil irradiated by nuclear fallout, the ``ground people,'' as he calls them, are a fratricidal bunch whose incessant conflicts mirror human callousness, greed and wanton destruction of the environment. Joseph falls in love with one of the elvessweet-tempered, poised Avaand sheds his cynical shell, reexamining his driven life and his neglect of his estranged son, Jason. Harry, one of the ground people, conspires to murder their tyrannical leader, Edam, in a plot that involves Joseph as accomplice. With Edam dead, treacherous, possessive Harry menaces Ava with a knife, so protective Joseph kills the elf in his sleep. Illustrated with fey line drawings, this lyrical allegory raises basic questions about interspecies communication and cooperation, whether murder is ever justified, and how to heal our ruptured relationship with the earth. Melhem (Heroism in the New Black Poetry) is an American Book Award-winning critic, poet and novelist. Illustrations not seen by PW. (Mar.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review