From Publishers Weekly
The hero of Osborne's incisive debut novel is a glacier of a man. Rooted in his small upstate New York hometown of Sparta, like the five generations of Metcalfes before him, 65-year-old botany professor Uncas is a man for whom change is not an option. Having achieved a "resilient stasis," Uncas is as unwilling to accept the "physical upheaval of the heart of Sparta" as he is the "big-city prices for glorified bread" at the new bagel shop; so when Margaret, Uncas's wife of 40 years, suffers a leg injury that keeps her bedridden, Uncas loses the only buffer between his outmoded worldview and reality. The impact of his chronic stoicism on his loved ones reveals itself to Uncas when the younger of his two daughters, Fauna Fletcher, returns to Sparta with her husband, Doug, and their three children. An unlikely friendship with a rebellious teenage girl and the threat of a disturbed former student also serve to bring Uncas closer to understanding his family and world. Though Uncas's dedication to tradition can seem extreme, Osborne establishes a genuine sense of history and caring in Uncas's familial relationships with just a few well-chosen words. (May)
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Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
Osborne's graceful minuet of a novel, her first, is set in the 1980s in a small, floundering town in upstate New York. Uncas Metcalfe, a botany professor famous for his strictness, is proud of occupying land his family has held since the 1600s, but he has grown rigid and resistant to life. When things turn chaotic after his wife is injured in an accident, and his youngest child, Fauna, pregnant with her fourth child, moves back to Sparta with her out-of-work husband, Uncas thinks he "might have fared better as a tree." Already unhappy over how much the town has changed, worried about his marriage, and blind to others' needs and preoccupations, Uncas is unprepared for the bizarre and threatening behavior of a disgruntled former student. Osborne's concerns are gratifyingly complex, the predicaments she orchestrates unusual and suspenseful, her humor lithe, and her insights into what signifies strength and what indicates weakness are keen and provocative, adding up to an empathic and finely modulated drama reminiscent of works by Gail Godwin, Jane Hamilton, and Anne Tyler. Donna Seaman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved


