WARNING: Review contains spoilers.
Sometimes you pick up a book based on its cover or the description on the back/cover jacket, and get something entirely different than you were expecting. Such was the case with "Afternoon of the Elves" -- I picked it up thinking it would be either a light fantasy or at least a tale of friendship between two very different girls. The book ended up being far different than I expected... but despite being haunted and even horrified by what I read, I found this book to be a short but wonderfully complex story about poverty, mental illness, and the unlikely bond that is forged between two girls from very different families and ways of life.
Hillary is a child from a comfortable middle-class family, who is warned by classmates and parents alike to stay away from her neighbor Sarah-Kate. Sarah-Kate is a strange and angry child, dressed in strange clothes and men's work boots and whose troubling behavior caused her to be held back a year. So when Sarah-Kate invites Hillary over to her backyard to play, Hillary is understandably wary. But Sarah-Kate has a surprise in store for Hillary -- a tiny village with houses made of stones and leaves, which she insists must have been built by elves. As Hillary helps Sarah-Kate tend to the elf village and watches new buildings and other delights spring up around it, she finds herself wondering what kind of special connection Sarah-Kate has with these tiny creatures, and longs to see one for herself. But Sarah-Kate is hiding other secrets about her life, and when Hillary accidentally brings these secrets to light, the consequences will shatter both girls' worlds.
For those picking this book up expecting a childlike fantasy... it's not. The elf village, despite playing a big role in the book, isn't its primary focus. And while there are scenes in this book that have a magical feel to them, the book leaves it very ambiguous whether anything fantastic or otherworldly actually happened. It gives the book a feeling of magical realism, and while some readers might be bothered by the lack of concrete answers, I found that leaving some things up to the reader to decide actually made for a richer reading experience.
The book's primary focus is on the unlikely friendship that springs up between Hillary and Sarah-Kate... as well as the vast differences in their upbringings. While Hillary comes from a loving and well-off family, Sarah-Kate comes from a troubled home and dire financial circumstances, and has to resort to incredible lengths to survive and keep what's left of her family together. And though the book never comes right out and says it, it's heavily implied that Sarah-Kate has some deep-seated mental and/or emotional troubles as well. I would have liked to have learned more about Sarah-Kate's eventual fate and see if her story ended happily at all... but perhaps the takeaway here is that we never do learn the endings of some stories, and some people will touch our lives in profound ways and then vanish, leaving it up to us to decide what to do with what they have given us.
I expected a light YA fantasy in picking this up... and got a surprisingly dark and complex, but deeply touching, story about an unlikely friendship and a girl's determination to survive and find light and beauty in her circumstances. It might be a disappointment for those actually expecting fantasy creatures to make an appearance, but it has enough maybe-magic sprinkled throughout to be tantalizing... and the emotional impact more than makes up for any disappointment.