The Happiness Glass explores the imaginative terrain between essays and
short fiction. The narrative takes us from remote NSW to New Zealand and
England through a series of deeply affecting experiences of poverty,
domestic violence, loneliness, infertility, adoption and grief. Carol
Lefevre's writing is sharp, moving, insightful and beautifully poetic.
Lily's story allows the author to navigate some of the difficulties of
memoir, and out of its bittersweet blend of real, remembered, and
imagined life, the portrait of a writer gradually emerges. In fiction
that forms around a core of memory, life writing that acknowledges the
elusiveness of truth, Carol Lefevre has written a remarkable,
risk-taking book that explores questions of homesickness, infertility,
adoption, and family estrangement in Lily Brennan's life, and in her
own.