The lives of middle-aged women struggling with jobs and family, friendship and romance, are captured to perfection in this collection of humorous and touching stories set in the contemporary Southwest. Mary Sojourner writes about hardworking, hard-living, blue-collar women who fight quietly and fiercely to make their way in the world, find love and beauty, and hold on to their hopes. The heroines, most of them over forty, include single moms, aging hippies, women newly awakening to the possibility of love, and women confronting their own mortality.
I could never consider Mary Sojourner "delicate". Although this book wasn't a memoir, I felt like most of these stories could have been plucked from Sojourner's life. To me it read like a whole book of the "I have this 'friend' that has this or that problem" scenario. This book is obviously geared towards middle-aged woman, and being 25 now, couldn't necessarily relate. I did however feel a great sadness realizing how hard and confusing it has to be to lose your identity as a woman and learn to take on a new role when your kids are grown up and other such changes.