The story opens in 1937 with a letter penned by a young man named Robert informing his parents that he is leaving for Spain with his buddy, Max, whose family “woke up one morning with a Star of David burned into their front yard.” Max, with his keen sense of injustice, feels compelled to go to Spain to fight against Franco; he is killed, leaving Robert on his own. In a moment of courage, Robert fires his rifle, killing a soldier on horseback who is about to murder a young boy. Maria del Carmen Escobar, the young boy’s sister, hides Robert in an old olive oil jar deep in the ground, where he remains for decades. The narrative jumps to 1969, when Michael Virtue, recently graduated from college, is motorcycling in Spain thinking about his uncle Robert, about whom he heard stories when he was a child. After crashing his motorcycle, Michael meets Carmen, who tells him Robert is dead, but she never shows him his grave. Twenty years later, Michael returns to Spain to investigate what happened to Robert. He brings with him the mysterious Delia, who is on the run from the FBI, and he reconnects with Carmen. Averett’s large cast of emotionally complex characters is psychologically tormented by literal and figurative remnants (from old ruins to whispered stories) of the Spanish Civil War. As one character says, “when the body dies, what remains are the stories. They never die.” The author deftly limns each character’s wounds: Michael is obsessed with ferreting out the truth about his uncle; Eugenio, an increasingly deranged military officer, seeks revenge for the murder of a family member; and both Delia and Carmen nurse damaged souls. Via quietly intense and emotionally resonant prose, readers are immersed in a world of psychological distress and mystery.
 
 
 
 