Digging to Indochina
Description: Ivy MacKenzie, at seventeen, spends
most of her time hanging out at Rivertown Billiards, the
local pool hall that her dead father, a Vietnam veteran,also
loved. Her swaggering bravado hides her inner insecurity;
she’s bound and determined to go her own way, to see the
world, even if that means running off to Florida with Gil
Thompson, an abusive stranger she meets playing pool, who
shows her a way out.
Fifteen-year-old Bryan and their mother, Carol, carry on
at home with the support of Neal Richards, a high school
shop teacher who becomes part of the family. The only news
of Ivy comes in the form of cryptic postcards until she
shows up back home, ashamed and disillusioned. She needs
her family to save her from herself and the violent man
who says he loves her, if only she could admit it.
Reviews
"An always interesting authentic story about the next
generation, the children of Vietnam veterans, the children
who dig to Indochina, not China. A good solid read."
- Grace Paley
"Digging is an apt metaphor for Connie Biewald's writing,
which probes and sifts the buried storage vaults of family
relationships with an archaeologist's precision. Her work
will appeal to those readers who love the fiction of Anne
Tyler and Carol Shields."
- Lois Lowry
Read Excerpts