In Sister Zero, a woman who never wanted
children suddenly becomes a mother to her nine-year-old nephew after her sister
commits suicide at age 34. Fifteen years later, the boy will also kill himself
and in almost exactly the same manner.
Sister Zero is narrated through short prose sections and snippets of ?advice? from
Mister Ed (of the old television show), while Nance Van Winckel exhumes the
sisters' shared childhood for missed clues, interrogates memory's accuracy, and
interacts with a mother who's disappearing into late-stage Alzheimer's.
As the shock of these deaths
ripples out, the book progresses in swift strokes between the tough and tender,
often staring stony-eyed at a terrifying moment, then jumping forward or
backward in time to a moment of quiet humor.
Each chapter begins with an altered
page from the Official Guide to the 1964 World's Fair: collages Van Winckel
made as testaments to that touchstone event in New York when the sisters were
children, a time she realized how huge the world was, how vastly different
other countries and cultures were from her own. The Fair was all about the
future, its bright and happy promises. She and her now-dead sister rode a ride
called ?tunnel to the future.? The sister was scared; our narrator was not.