Blindness will be like this. So says ten-year-old Will Burton, trying to reimagine his life in the wake of his father's abrupt disappearance, as his family picks up stakes and moves to California. Another boy, Rogelio Augilar, risks his life to cross the border illegally from Mexico to reach his father, enduring gangs, police roundups, and the pitiless desert. And Marlene McClure, a hard-edged, feisty teenager, leaves her own Midwestern home in search of a father she has imagined but never known. The lives of each of these families converge on a single home in Los Angeleswhere the very needs and desires that have torn them apart allow them a measure of hope together. Written with heart-stopping grace and a powerful understanding of the needs and desires that define family,A considerable feat.A deft juggler of plot lines. . . . [Silver] conjures an aching world of half-truths, physical need and emotional frustration.Gripping and at times heartbreaking. . . . Silver, with her attention to everyday detail and her determination to take seriously the myriad individual lives that create California, has crafted a beautiful, honest and poignant novel of this siren state.A tensely emotional debut novel of abandonment, loss, and the unexpected shapes families take to survive. Silver is masterful at orchestrating her complicated cast of characters and settings&.Moving and resonant.