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In each of these stories Ingalls sets everyday characters in unusual circumstances and asks them to cope with the present and accept their past. Devoted readers of this perceptive writer will recognize her subtle ability to reveal the most profound observations through seemingly small and ordinary happenings. Those not familiar with her work will find themselves inspired by her magical craftsmanship to closely examine their own experience as they seek answers about the world around them.
320 pages, Hardcover
First published June 15, 1988
How fast everything had seemed, and how special and different and sophisticated and rich. All the things that had struck me at first—the odd formality that would have been unfriendliness at home, the attitudinizing, the orgies of talk, the tension and snobbery—seemed to make life so complicated. But then you acquire a taste for complicated things, nothing simpler will satisfy you. Go back home, and it's a let-down, there's something missing, everything is slower, duller, the conversation makes you want to bang your head against the wall.