Nine-year-old Kati lives an idyllic life with her grandparents in their ancestral home by a river in present-day Thailand. Grandma and Grandpa, though loving, are solemn and sad, carrying a secret burden hinted at in chapter subheadings: Kati's mother left her with them years before. Suddenly the child is asked if she wants to see her, and she decides to go to the house by the sea where her mother, a corporate lawyer, is dying from ALS. Kati learns all about the disease from her mother's friends Uncle Kunn and Aunt Da, who will stay with Pat until her death. Before that happens, Kati and Mother have the chance to renew their relationship; Kati learns the circumstances of her birth and early years. But all too soon Mother succumbs to her illness and, following her death, her cousin introduces Kati to many details of her mother's life. She is then given another choice, whether or not to make contact with her father, and she cleverly resolves her conflict. While issues of parental responsibility and death with dignity are central to the story, the focus remains on Kati and her responses to what is going on around her.
By Jane Vejjajiva, Paperback, Simplified Chinese characters, 103 pages, 8.25"x6.75"