(11/3/2014)
Konrad Adenauer, the first post-war Chancellor of West Germany from 1949 to 1963, is credited with saying, "We all live under the same sky, but we don't all have the same horizon." In Amanda Eyre Ward's latest novel, Same Sky, the same thing can be said for the two leading characters, Alice and Carla.
Alice, a 40-something native New Yorker/Austin, Texas transplant, has faced many difficult horizons since becoming an adult: the loss of her mother, surviving breast cancer and living with the complicated and very often devastating circumstances of infertility. However dark her days have been, Alice possesses a form of eternal optimism that propels her forward in her happily married life with Jake, a professional Texas BBQ smoke-master. One cannot help but be on her side, hoping and praying that someday, her dreams will be fulfilled.
Far away in a very dark and dangerous part of Central America, 12-year-old Carla lives her life under a sky that is constantly raining a hopeless terror, an unending hunger and a hostile future. Left with her aged grandmother and younger siblings by her Mother who escaped to America to make a better life, Carla's childhood is non-existent – she is forced to live an adult's life. Determined to be with her mother, she embarks on a venture of escape that is rife with all of the vulgarities of this world and the next, making her an even older version of a 12-year-old, more burdened than one can imagine.
The intersection of the lives of these two comes together not only under the same sky, but also with the view of a mutual horizon of hope that is beyond their wildest dreams – both being freed and able to focus on the life they have struggled to achieve.