Dimensions
162 x 236 x 27mm
From the author of the acclaimed debut novel The Curiosity comes an emotionally resonant tale about a woman who must take care of two wounded men - one, her soldier-husband, just home from the war in Iraq; the other, a dying World War II scholar-historian who harbors a long-buried secret. Deborah Porter is a registered nurse and hospice worker, the caregiver of last resort for the cantankerous Barclay Reed, a dying history professor who lives on Oregon's Lake Oswego. Deborah is surprised to learn that her newest charge's books have all been removed from the library at Portland State University, where he taught for many years. When she asks him why, he reveals that his career was ruined by a long-ago academic scandal but is reluctant to say more. Deborah herself is in a vulnerable place: her husband, Michael, a soldier who recently completed a third tour of duty in Iraq, has returned home a changed man. For the first time, Deborah, a woman whose life mission is to minister to those who are hurting, is at a loss to help the person who is most precious to her. When Reed learns of Deborah's despair, he makes a decision to reveal to Deborah the provocative historical research at the root of his professional downfall - the little-known story of a Japanese air attack on the US mainland during World War II and its aftermath. For, the professor feels, somewhere in that story lies a lesson that can help Deborah save her marriage. It might be "a work of genius, a story that the world must be told," he tells her, or "the bizarre product of an old man's deluded fictions." His only condition: she must tell him, at the story's conclusion, whether or not she believes it is true.