编辑推荐
Soli’s debut revolves around three characters whose lives are
affected by the Vietnam War. Helen Adams comes to Vietnam in the
hopes of documenting the combat that took her brother from her. She
immediately attracts the attention of the male journalists in the
region, and quickly falls into an affair with the grizzled but
darkly charismatic war photographer Sam Darrow. As Helen starts to
make her own way as a photographer in Vietnam, drawing as much
attention for her gender as for her work, Darrow sends her his
Vietnamese assistant, Linh, a reluctant soldier who deserted the
SVA in the wake of his wife’s death. While Linh wants nothing more
than to escape the war, Darrow and Helen are consumed by it, unable
to leave until the inevitable tragedy strikes. The strength here is
in Soli’s vivid, beautiful depiction of war-torn Vietnam, from the
dangers of the field, where death can be a single step away, to the
emptiness of the Saigon streets in the final days of the American
evacuation. --Kristine Huntley --This text refers to the Hardcover
edition.
内容简介
While the horrors of war are never far from the surface, the
love stories, as well as Helen's personal evolution, lie at the
center of The Lotus Eaters. (A few critics compared Helen's wartime
experience to the rush experienced by characters in the Academy
Award–winning The Hurt Locker, and the title refers to the lotus
eaters who, in Greek mythology, become addicted to the opiate.)
Soli's visceral writing captures an alluring, dangerous country,
and she excels at conveying the intricacies of war-torn lives. A
few critics disagreed about the centrality of the romance and the
characterizations, but overall, they had little but high praise for
the work. "If you've never read a novel about the Vietnam War, this
could be the book for you," concluded the Dallas Morning News.
--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.