THE WAR AT HOME
Nora Eisenberg, . . Leapfrog, $14.95 (216pp) ISBN 978-0-9679520-4-8
Billed as a "memoir novel," this book by Bronx native Eisenberg is a tenderly written yet harrowing portrayal of a family's disintegration in the years after World War II. Lucy Lehman is just a child when her father returns from the war. According to Lucy's mother, Tippy, he was once a sweet young man, but now he is angry and violent, his screaming rages most frequently directed at Lucy's rebellious older brother, Nick, and Tippy, a children's dance instructor (her real-life image graces the book's cover). When Lucy is 10, whatever tacit agreement the family had abruptly ends, and her father leaves the house and shacks up with a mistress named Liberty in the first of several dalliances. This development throws Tippy into a downward spiral of prescription drug abuse and bizarre, erratic behavior that forces Lucy and 13-year-old Nick to fend for themselves. To escape the "chaos of home," they rely on their self-sufficiency as volunteer gardeners at a park and botanical garden and then at the family's Camp Pohogo, where a parental reunion occurs. The reunion, however, like most of Eisenberg's book, remains joyful for only a fleeting moment. By Lucy's teen years, Tippy's over-the-top rampages (à la
Reviewed on: 01/21/2002
Genre: Fiction