Not much ever really happens in Tillie Walden books, but I haven't really much cared, for the most part. She's a very young and remarkably prolific artist/author who writes mainly about spacious and gorgeously pastel watercolored queer worlds, generally as few males as possible, and all the women/girls are halting, reticent, edging toward each other in desire. It's not wild women, never raucous hilarious women, it's tortured, private women.
This one is a little different in some respects; she's trying some new things. This is a road trip, involving an escape to West Texas for Lou, 27, and Bea, a teen, who have both suffered grief/trauma (one survives sexual assault, revealed right there in the publisher jacket description). That's already a difference, in that is a remarkable set of dramatic revelations not typical for Walden. Otherwise it feels familiar as a Walden story, aimless, they have no real destination in their travel; the point is in the mundane title, that they--in spite of regularly sniping at each other--finally listen to each other's stories and support each other.
Another difference: there's no explicit desire between the girl and the woman; they just befriend each other, so that seems rare in these early Walden works.
So that's exactly what it sounds like: Pretty straightforward and unremarkable storytelling, though it's cartooned with such subtlety and grace and quiet flair you really just have to keep reading/viewing.
They also pick up a lost cat along the way that would seem to possess some magical properties, which come in handy as they are pursued by a couple of ominous High Way Control guys. Not sure why any of that stuff needed to be in here, but one of Walden's stories is sci-fi, taking place in a crumbling school floating in space, but these elements didn't really seem integral to the plot. They just add some magic (the cat) and suspense (the creepy guys). That there are as many guys in this story as there are is also different for Walden. The space novel had zero guys in it. And there's also very little atmospheric architecture in this one; Walden loves to draw cool large buildings and this has only one, a large abandoned building with a pool in it, for some reason. Feels dream-like, serves no real purpose in the narrative except for them to take a break from their travels and swim in it.
I think the mundane friendship story mashed with the peripheral suspense/magic genre elements make this a 3 star story for me, but I don't seem to be able to give Walden less than five stars for her illustration work, so I'm still up to 4 stars for this one. You just have to pick one up even just to look at it.