In his second collection of short stories, James Leo Herlihy explores a
landscape of people living on the fringes of normal society as the
pleasures of daily life fade. Men and women search for the missing
fragment of meaning from their existence with Herlihy's signature humor
and deft dialogue.
In the titular story, Mary Ellen McClure is trapped in a dull,
unfulfilled life in a trailer park, suspecting her husband of having an
affair. Together with her neighbor Ivy, she dabbles with a Ouija board
which spells out the name Ezra and implies that Mary Ellen will have an
affair. She becomes enamored with the fantasy of this unknown man - at
first falling deep into the escapism of the imagined affair, then
resolving to find him for real to save her from her stale life.
Herlihy's other gothic tales tell of Consilada Rector, who can't get
people to believe in the leprechaun that presides over her husband's
bar; Mrs. Dorothy Fitzpatrick, who records of the existence of a ghostly
mail delivery truck; and a dying man who comes to stay with a mother and
her blessed son William.