Ali Bryan's debut novel Roost is the amusing and oddly touching story of Claudia, single mother and marketing professional. Narrated in Claudia's edgy, fast-paced, plain-spoken voice, the novel takes us through a series of personal crises as she struggles to wrangle her children-—Wes (four) and Joan (two)-—and cope with her father's erratic behaviour following the death of her mother. Separated from Glen, who is still in the picture but showing distinct signs of moving on with his life, Claudia's days are already complex and hectic before her mother's sudden death during a Caribbean vacation. After this her father becomes an additional worry. But Claudia cannot slow down or take time off. Life and career continue to make demands and she has no choice but to meet them head on. Ali Bryan's Claudia could very well be the prototypical 21st-century single mom: a young woman for whom emotional fulfillment is elusive and who makes it through the day with her head hovering just above the waterline, thankful for any stray moment of peace she can snatch, a glass of wine in one hand and soggy diaper in the other. Though none of them are particularly capable, and all of them have troubles of their own, she is unashamedly reliant on sympathetic friends and family to hold it all together. Not above bribing her kids with fast food and ice cream to get them to behave, and calling her kitchen appliances assholes when they don’t cooperate, Claudia is hardly a candidate for mother of the year. But she does what she has to and succeeds (more or less) against sizable odds, and by these means wins over the reader. Her business trip to Calgary is a brilliant set piece, in itself worth the price of admission. Ali Bryan has written a witty, sharply observed and genuinely entertaining novel that will appeal to readers who can appreciate its ironic perspective. And for the sociologists among us, it is also a wry and astute commentary on family, sibling rivalry and contemporary life in urban Canada.