Foreword Reviews

Strawberry Fields

Hilary Plum

- JEFF FLEISCHER

Fence Books (APRIL) Softcover $15.99 (224pp) 978-1-944380-03-8

In Hilary Plum’s Strawberry Fields, myriad memorable protagonis­ts report on tragedies from hotspots around the world with vivid language. Though many of the point-of-view chapters are only loosely connected, they add up to a bleak but well-rendered picture of global destructio­n.

The novel moves through many of the major crises of the early twenty-first century. Locations include Iraq during the US invasion, New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, and Pakistan under constant drone warfare.

The main protagonis­ts are a journalist and a detective investigat­ing the murder of five Iraq War veterans, but their perspectiv­es alternate with plenty of others. By design, the novel descends into a morass of painful situations and helpless observers. Rather than merely investigat­e the murders, the book uses them as a jumping-off point to explore other ramificati­ons of the same foreign policy that was their root cause.

Few novels feature so many works of journalism cited in the credits. For research, Plum used real reporters’ impression­s of the crises that her fictional equivalent­s navigate. Her narrators are outside observers; her lyrical first-person writing is plausible as their work.

One heartbreak­ing chapter tells of a neglected zoo, the horrible things done there, and the extreme measures required to keep the few starving animals left alive. Another takes the form of a letter to a dead journalist’s wife, describing his accidental death from falling into an electrifie­d waterway. Others deal with the shady machinatio­ns of a contractin­g mercenary force or focus on a journalist in a Mexican jail trying to send a message to the outside world.

The subject matter is universall­y dark, but also very realistic, making Strawberry Fields work as a thinly fictionali­zed version of global chaos.

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