What do you think?
Rate this book


344 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2000
She follows his diagrams of air masses and arrows, and what she sees is a body of warm air sliding up over a body of cold air and trapping it there against its will, or a body of cold air pushing up under the skirts of warm air before thrusting up, but so clumsily, so restlessly, so oily and cold in its slovenly manners that there's no true mating, just a jostling for position that ends in depression, which she already knows about, she's in one after all.That was precocious, prepubescent Norma Joyce at nine. But stick with her into her forties, as she suffers, changes, discovers:
Looking to the end of the leafy street, the trees entering their period of fullest beauty, her mother's picture tucked under her arm, she felt like a berth into which a boat had just slipped. The telling nudge as two things, which have been apart, come together.Readers who treasure the telling nudge over the clumsy thrust will love this book.