Since her remarkable debut in 1948, Elizabeth Spencer has transfixed
readers with her uncanny ability to portray how "twisted, chafing,
inescapable, and life-supporting" (Alice Munro) the ties are that bind
families and marriages. Here, with nine new stories, Spencer maps "the
murky territory between our obligations and our desires" (David L. Ulin,
Los Angeles Times), revealing the deep emotional fault lines and
unseen fractures that lie just beneath the veneer of normal family life.
Compared to Cheever and Hawthorne, Spencer affirms her stature as one of
the outstanding living writers of the American South.