Reverend Ames is elderly, in his 70s his much younger wife and son are grace notes to a life lived, somewhat ambivalently, in the service of his lord. What her characters yearn for is nothing less than God. Here’s a writer who listens to us all, as well as to the yearnings of her characters. Robinson has spent the better part of two decades, in four stand-alone novels that connect through their characters and settings, exploring the notion that, as the author has observed, beauty is “a casual glimpse of something ordinary.” Her moral authority is commanding, and her ear for our country’s language-its conversational rhythms, its plainspokenness-is impeccable. Just a few pages into the novel the reader can see why it won the Pulitzer Prize in 2005-and why it continues to enthrall.
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