This book contains eleven short stories, spanning seven decades and set in two continents. The themes are dark, touching on much that is unpleasant but offering, too, the hope of redemption.
`I look at him and feel ashamed of both of us.'
What makes these stories work is the extraordinarily vivid characters that Mr Burke creates in each story. Some of the stories are linked through their characters; others share themes - of childhood, of the price of peace, of the cost of war, of the personal impact of disaster.
Three stories particularly remain in my mind: in `Texas City, 1947' the Sonnier children's father disappears. They are left with an abusive stepmother. They develop their own solution to this problem. In `Winter Light', set in Montana, an aging professor tries to deal with trespassing hunters. His actions have their own sense, but are not likely to prevail.
` "We're here", one of the hunters yelled at the others. "We're here".'
And, in `Jesus Out to Sea' set in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina we see failure. Not only has the government failed to react effectively to the disaster, the city itself had been moving from hope to despair. There is less hope evident in this story: it's hard to move past the imagery of Jesus on a cross, the remnant of a destroyed church, floating away in the floodwaters.
I also enjoyed the trio of stories featuring Charlie and his best friend Nick Hauser, growing up in 1940s Houston: `The Molester'; `The Burning of the Flag' and `Why Bugsy Siegel Was a Friend of Mine'.
Jennifer Cameron-Smith