Inside
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
1996: Grace, a psychiatrist, juggles a suicidal boyfriend and a young patient's impending abortion.
2002: Annie, a struggling actress, takes pity on a homeless girl and invites her into her New York apartment.
2006: Mitch, a divorced counsellor, finds that listening to other people's problems takes his mind off his own.
Ten years. Three lives. One truth: helping other people is infinitely simpler than helping yourself.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A trio of interlocked stories, Ohlin's bleak second novel shadows three broken people on the hunt for fulfillment who sabotage any true chance of finding it. Grace, an indiscriminately nurturing yet controlling therapist, falls hard for "Tug," a PTSD-afflicted stranger she discovers after a botched suicide attempt; with all the glaring red flags Ohlin plants, it's a wonder Grace doesn't see his second attempt this one successful coming. Mitch, Grace's brooding ex-husband, takes up with an exacting beauty far beyond his league; surprisingly to him, if not to readers, she shacks up with her gynecologist after Mitch goes away on business. And then there's the morally vapid Annie, a former cutter and one of Grace's ex-patients, who abandons her banal New York life to pursue stardom via copious sexual conquests in Hollywood; the glamorous lifestyle, of course, isn't all it's cracked up to be. Some juicy side plots such as the saga involving the pregnant homeless runaway who ingratiates herself with Annie aren't given enough room to breathe, perhaps due to Ohlin's flair for crafting emotionally complex short stories that are often left open-ended. Nonetheless, the demonstrated chasm between her characters' intentions and actions and what inevitably transpires is, perhaps like life, what makes this book so voluminous and so empty at the same time.