Sixteen-year-old Lava lives peacefully enough with her imperfect mother,
Lila, and their boarder, Cody, an Iraqi war vet suffering from PTSD.
Lava's ex-addict father, Jesse, is released from prison, and Lava's life
in Detroit is upended when Jesse pressures Lava for her urine so he can
pass his mandatory drug tests. After an altercation, Lava is sent to
live with her mother's cousin Lola in Seville. Lola is a
larger-than-life flamenco dancer who teaches Lava the language of
flamenco dance; Lava's life opens outward as she becomes fluent in
flamenco's structure, giving her new modes of expression as she
experiences first love, friendship, and betrayal, and uncovers family
secrets. Rich with lyrical, sensual prose, Duende is a coming-of-age
novella about mothers and daughters, about legacy, about
self-expression, about defining a way to live.