Overview
You are on the sweltering Gulf Coast of Mississippi and it is the autumn of 2005. Hurricane Katrina roared in on Aug. 29th, almost a month ago. Mountains of garbage and debris cover the landscape. Floating casinos that had been anchored offshore are now hauled out along the coast like beached whales. Plastic shopping bags flutter in the trees like flags of defeat. And another hurricane is only days away.
The place is Hancock County, Mississippi, and it is early on the morning of Sept. 21st when four people are thrust together in the hunt for a fifth, Landon Prall, a mentally ill teenager who ran away just before Katrina hit.
His estranged mother and father, Dewey Bassett and Hershel Prall, have been desperately looking for him. On this morning, two government disaster workers come to their assistance, Travis Harney and Lew Roche.
The four characters are from different walks of life. Dewey is Black while the three men are white. She lives in Chalmette, Louisiana, where she's a dental technician. Hershel is a commercial diver who lives in Ansley, Mississippi, in the marshland on the coast of the Gulf of Mexico. Estranged though they are, Dewey and Hershel have nonetheless raised Landon together, and are crazy to find him now.
While their main job is media relations, Travis and Lew share the mission of all responders: to help survivors put their lives back together. Travis is a wildland firefighter from Oregon, and Lew, a desk jockey for an Oregon state agency. A disaster veteran, Travis is sympathetic to the parents' situation but puts first his and Lew's work assignment for the day. A disaster rookie, Lew can't resist trying to help the mom and dad.
You'll follow these four as they deal with the strain of trying to find Landon all day and into the night. Their struggle will make plain the main theme of Infinite Tenderness: when the world spins out of control, the human capacity for tenderness becomes infinite.
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