First published in 1993, Sister is a story of love and violence
bearing justice. In author and critic Jim Lewis' first novel, an
orphaned, 17-year-old Wilson leaves his Nebraska home and heads south to
Mississippi. There, he finds work as a gardener on the estate of the
Miller clan--a nuclear family with two lovely daughters, Marian and
Olivia, living in compliant happiness. Wilson's surreptitious presence
soon casts a quiet path of destruction through the Miller home with very
tangible results for the sisters. Twenty years after its original
publication, Lewis' lyrical, atmospheric novel remains exacting in its
appraisal of young love linked to loss and unnerving in its examination
of the isolated American family.