Desierto Sonoro / Lost Children Archive: A novel
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*Starred Review* Luiselli's spectacular latest—her first fiction in English—also marks her co-narrator debut. The Mexican-born Luiselli is the dominant voice here; her accent slight, her enunciation careful. Only her collaboration could have enabled the affecting print-to-audio metamorphosis, choosing how photos, drawings, and maps might ‘sound' and creating descriptive copy for 24 unmarked-on-the-page Polaroids at book's end. Part roadtrip (with audiobooks even), part family drama, part testimony, Archive features a woman and her five-year-old daughter, and a man and his 10-year-old son, who have been a family for four years. The man and woman met while documenting NYC's 800-plus spoken languages. They've embarked cross-country to Arizona: the man to research the Apache people's native lands; the woman to search for a friend's missing daughters lost at the border. Seven boxes hold the family's lives—William DeMeritt interrupts briefly to tally the contents of the husband's four. The woman has one, the children another each. Kivlighan de Montebello—whose earnest, elongated vowels turn rock to rawwk, spot to spawwt—embodies the son as he plans a journey-for-two that goes awry. Luiselli's own child Maia Enrigue Luiselli provides soundscapes—more onomatopoeic memories than words—for Box VI. Through a family in crisis, Luiselli lays bare the disconnects of what we hear, what we see, what we understand—and what we can't, or simply won't. Copyright 2019 Booklist Reviews.