Strange ... A chronicle of the unmoored lives touched by this small, sanctified body and the funny, observant, determinedly unsanctified spirit tied to it. At just more than 100 pages, it’s the kind of concise, precisely sketched novel that you can read in one sitting, coming away with a sense of having been briefly but profoundly transported ... A sort of elevating, spiritual dance in language ... Rowe...is a challenging writer. A lover of language that is somehow simultaneously rich and sparse, she wants readers to work for the conclusions they draw ... There are times when the obscurity of this kind of imagery frustrates; it can seem too caught up in its own abstruse loveliness to really mean anything. But more frequently, it brings an unexpected and revelatory sharpness to the unfamiliar world Rowe describes ... Short and dense, full of emotion but also set at a slight perceptive remove.
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