Published on Double X (http://www.doublex.com)
Thirteen-year-old Rachel and her family struggle to deal with the fallout of the war on terror in Back Home.
By: Meredith Simons
Posted: August 26, 2009 at 10:34 AM
Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Julia Keller’s debut novel is a timely one. Back Home follows 13-year-old Rachel as she and her family struggle to deal with the fallout of the war on terror. For Rachel, whose father is in the National Guard, terror is personal: Her dad returns from Iraq in a wheelchair, physically and mentally traumatized by an IED. The family’s story could have been a classic tale of trauma and triumph: Dad gets hurt, dad mounts a heroic struggle, dad beats the brain injury. But I’d be surprised if Disney options the rights to Back Home—at least without making some substantial changes. Keller’s journalistic background allows her to avoid the clichés and too-easy victories so often associated with stories about physical obstacles, but while she is unsparingly honest about the terrible reality of brain injuries, she fails to create the emotional depth needed to carry a story that is not going to have a happy ending. Rachel’s voice isn’t convincing as a 13-year-old girl: Sometimes her language is artificially simplistic, at other times impossibly nuanced, but rarely is it convincing in its attempt to convey the turmoil that accompanies a parent’s life-altering injury. The result is a depiction of grief that may be accurate but ultimately is not accessible.