Body Language
A Novel
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- Pre-Order
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- Expected Sep 1, 2026
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
Three adult sisters are faced with their mother’s provocative last request in this clear-eyed and moving novel exploring choice, change, and power in the bodies and lives of four different women.
"One of the best novels I’ve read in years. It’s brainy and joyful and philosophical and really, really funny. It made me cry, which few books do. . . I loved it." —Leni Zumas, author of Wolf Bells
Sloane, a former actress now working as a therapist, is determined to find a meaningful way through menopause, away from marketing schemes, possibly with the aid of psychedelics. Her sister Laurel is managing her own growing rage and restlessness while engaging in work at an environmental nonprofit and raising teenagers. Nanette, the youngest, has answered a long-delayed religious calling and is living as a novice in a convent. All three lives will be further disrupted when Sloane receives a call summoning her to their mother’s house, Laurel discovers possible evidence of her husband’s infidelity, and Nanette finds herself in the middle of a media frenzy after a spontaneous act of public prayer.
Soon, all three are reunited under their mother’s roof, and no one can seem to agree about anything beyond the obvious: Barbara has dementia, as did her mother and sister before her. Will it be an opportunity for the closed door of their very private mother’s inner life to crack open? A lesson in care; a shared responsibility that will be the making of this family, divided by large age gaps, parental divorce, and temperament? Or will a stunning revelation upend not only their mother’s remaining time, but divide the sisters permanently?
With razor-sharp prose and undeniable humor, acclaimed author Meg Howrey brings an American family in the midst of a painful crisis to unforgettable life, interrogating memory and emotional inheritance, the right of a woman’s autonomy, and the indelible bonds even the most disparate of sisters can share.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Three women return to their Indiana home as their mother's Alzheimer's worsens in the edgy and endearing latest from Howrey (They're Going to Love You). Sloane, 49, an actor turned psychotherapist, has been dealing with perimenopause by decluttering her home. Middle sister Laurel, 45, raises two kids, works part-time at an environmental nonprofit, and worries her husband is having an affair. Nanette, the youngest at 35, is training to become an Episcopalian nun and recently went viral for praying at a gun range ("All of us need to offer sorrow," she said, before lying face down in the shape of a cross). Cooped up together in their childhood home, they squabble about what to do with their down-to-earth mother, Barbara, who might have plans to end her life before she loses her mind entirely. Howrey regards her characters and their plights with a wry sense of humor, and she sweetens what could be a somber plot with depictions of sisterly affection. The siblings' bonds are shaped by their pragmatic Midwestern hometown, a place that has conditioned Barbara to regard even the most shocking news as "no big whoop." There's much to love in this unsentimental but briskly hopeful tale about the power of family.