Like the best essayists, Jane Silcott invites readers to her intimate musings-- to ride shotgun on a quest “to find out what [she] thought about things.” And when the trip inside her mind is over, you’re left with the favor of epiphany. Silcott’s Everything Rustles divvies 31 personal essays into four sections: Thresholds, Semantics, Graces, and Receptors. The essays’ themes, revolving around the Canadian author’s navigation of middle age, include gender perplexities, gynecology, marriage, unlikely connections, spirituality, guilt, and animals. Settings include caves, long dark driveways, public transportation, mountaintops, rock walls, deserted shores, laundry rooms, and kitchen tables. The pieces vary in structure and approach. Fear figures prominently throughout, yet so do breathtaking glimmers of meaning.