Invasion of the Daffodils

About Invasion of the Daffodils

During the Korean War, on a small island off the coast of California, eleven-year-old Chico Flores scavenges a mysterious crate of daffodil bulbs that have washed ashore at Sucker’s Cove. Chico is delighted; he can sell the bulbs and make much-needed money to support his family. But these bulbs are different, alien even. They seem to click and hiss and have minds of their own, and when planted, they send up their shoots unnaturally fast, swamping gardens, cracking through pavement, splitting the foundations of buildings. Very soon, the Island is facing a full-scale invasion, and as Chico and his family find themselves in the crosshairs of an irate community, the Islanders’ long-standing rifts around race, class, and sexuality explode into the open.

A lyrical novel about family, love, and heroism, Invasion of the Daffodils rifles through the tumult and debris of loss to examine the problems, possibilities, and inevitability of unexpected change.

Praise for Dino Enrique Piacentini’s 
Invasion of the Daffodils

“The combination of the insistently realistic with the overtly impossible makes [this] novel impossible to categorize. It’s not magical realism or surrealism. The novel feels at times like Roberto Bolaño’s dark dreamscapes, but the tone of Invasion of the Daffodils is too 1950s-America. It’s sort of like David Lynch meets John Steinbeck—if you can imagine that. I’ve never read anything quite like it, and that’s saying something. It’s a memorable, fascinating read, and it ought to find a wide readership. Piacentini writes beautiful sentences, and he burrows into his characters’ hearts and minds with insight and great clarity.”

—Robert Boswell, author of TumbledownThe Heyday of the Insensitive Bastards, and 
Mystery Ride

“Despite poverty, racism, and homophobia, Piacentini’s characters are convincingly resilient and tenacious. Miraculously, they maintain hope for the future….Piacentini’s novel, a colorful variation on magic realism, offers an immersive reading experience.”

The Gay & Lesbian Review

Invasion of the Daffodils ultimately tells a terrible tale of what happens to an island with so little tolerance it is even written on the faces of people who disappear halfway through the story, like ghosts with the temerity to look down upon the living…Invasion of the Daffodils is [a] fine, daring, perplexing, fantastical and challenging debut novel.”

Rocky Mountain Reader

“A timely snapshot of small-town alliances and bigotries, finely crafted into a story about all the ways that community can either come together or split apart. Piacentini writes with uncommon authority and grace, magic and realness, with landscape and characters so real it felt like I could climb into the book with them.”

—Jeni McFarland, author of The House of Deep Water

“Invasion of the Daffodils is that rare novel that is totally immersive. [Piacentini’s] characters and prose are so finely integrated that the effect is a bit like scuba diving in a coral reef—you sense the fine and subtle balance of so many interrelated parts even as you’re dazzled by the immediate flash and bloom of the whole entrancing spectacle. I finished this thoughtful exploration of race, war, sexuality, family, and generational history with the strange sense that I’d become a local in the tight-knit, warring island community. And that’s the magic of this book: once you’re in it you’ll carry it with you, just as you do that place where you, yourself, came of age.”

—Alexander Parsons, author of In the Shadows of the Sun and Leaving Disneyland

“Unflinching and lyrical, Piacentini’s Invasion of the Daffodils is like if One Hundred Years of Solitude was conceived of on the California coast.”

—Erika T. Wurth, author of White Horse

“I had two nights of dreams about Invasion of the Daffodils, which is a good sign of how it seeped into my heart and consciousness. Deftly combining history, family stories and magic realism, Invasion of the Daffodils introduces readers to a multi-generational Mexican-American family living in a shanty on a rugged island off the coast of Southern California. As the Korean War rages on and touches everyone in their small town, the Flores family members weather internal and external perils that threaten to shatter their bonds to each other and to the windswept island. Author Dino Enrique Piacentini chronicles how untreated illness, addiction, death, grinding poverty, and stinging workaday racism slam the Flores family as relentlessly as the waves that pound the island’s shores. Through it all, the family strives to hold itself together. A boy confronts the fearful wonder of his budding sexuality. A young man burns with island fever and yearns to flee the claustrophobic island. An aging matriarch stumbles into the mists of dementia. A father crumbles beneath the pressures of sustaining his family, and a young daughter takes on his burdens. All the while, a magical plague of flowers puts the superstitious island community on edge with explosive results.”

–Jaime Cortez, author of Gordo