The New York Times-bestselling author takes on New Agers as one
woman searches for meaning in this "brilliantly satiric but . . .
sweet-natured" novel (Publishers Weekly).
Thirty-year-old Martha is stagnating in a demeaning, woefully underpaid
job as a fact-checker at frothy fashion magazine Mode and an unhappy
relationship with an unrepentant jerk. But she stumbles upon an unlikely
new circle of friends when she interrupts a goddess-worshipping ceremony
on Fire Island and ends up rescuing its accident-prone leader, Isis
Moonwagon, from the waves.
From the steel skyscrapers of Manhattan to a sweat lodge in the Arizona
desert, Martha chases fulfillment and self-actualization in the company
of this group of opinionated, bumbling women, but the revelations she
receives are not necessarily what she expected.
"Prose's satiric vision could not be more sharply focused here, and her
powers of observation and deadpan humor never falter" as she sends up
the New Age movement and its over-earnest adherents (The Miami
Herald).