Publisher's Synopsis
In the early 1980s, a young American boy and his family move to Okinawa, Japan, as part of a military posting. Wanting to immerse themselves fully in the local culture, the family chooses to live off-base in a traditional Japanese neighborhood nestled on a hill overlooking both a vast, jungle-flanked zoo and a sprawling cemetery filled with ancient above-ground crypts. As the only Americans in the neighborhood, the children navigate friendships without a shared language, explore forbidden jungles rumored to hide dangers from the war, and spend afternoons helping a kind elderly neighbor known affectionately as Mama-san. One evening, Mama-san invites the boy to sit with her in her garden, sharing tea and a haunting story rooted in wartime tragedy-a tale of a mother who lost her children during a mass suicide driven by fear of invading forces, and who now, some say, still wanders the cemetery searching for them. As the boy listens, he begins to see and hear something in the dark among the crypts-something white, weeping, and lost.