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QINGDAO TODAY
在线翻译:
szdaily -> Culture -> 
Dear Edward
    2020-06-17  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

Edward Adler, 12, is moving to California with his adored older brother Jordan and their parents: Mom is a scriptwriter for television, Dad is a mathematician who is home-schooling his sons.

They will get no further than Colorado, where the plane goes down. Napolitano’s novel twins the narrative of the flight from takeoff to impact with the story of Edward’s life over the next six years.

Taken in by his mother’s sister and her husband, a childless couple in New Jersey, Edward’s misery is constant and almost impermeable.

Unable to bear sleeping in the never-used nursery his aunt and uncle have hastily appointed to serve as his bedroom, he ends up bunking next door, where there’s a kid his age, a girl named Shay. This friendship becomes the single strand connecting him to the world of the living.

Meanwhile, in alternating chapters, we meet all the doomed airplane passengers, explore their backstories, and learn about their hopes and plans, every single one of which is minutes from obliteration.

For some readers, Napolitano’s premise will be too dark to bear, underlining our terrible vulnerability to random events and our inability to protect ourselves or our children from the worst-case scenario while also imagining in exhaustive detail the bleak experience of survival. The people around Edward have no idea how to deal with him; his aunt and uncle try their best to protect him from the horrors of his instant celebrity as Miracle Boy. As one might expect, there is a ray of light for Edward at the end of the tunnel, and for hardier readers this will make Napolitano’s novel a story of hope.(SD-Agencies)

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