The Way It Is Now


TheWayItIsNow The Way It Is Now

In the fif­teen sto­ries col­lected in The Way It Is Now, girl­hood, love, sex­ual ini­ti­a­tion, moth­er­hood, and mid­dle age are played out in cau­ter­iz­ing dra­mas against a vari­ety of back­ground set­tings. Growth is often forced rather than cho­sen, and the joys of matu­rity gleam and vanish.

In “August Ninth at Natural Bridge,” a young girl is made to rec­og­nize her inde­pen­dence from her fam­ily at a time when she wants noth­ing but her father’s com­pas­sion and atten­tion; in “The Big Day,” a girl wait­ing for her sol­dier hus­band to come home finds that, in spite of her efforts, the gap between them can­not be healed. “Conversations” tele­scopes the life of a con­ven­tional man who lives on the mar­row of female expe­ri­ence, starved for the emo­tional tumult of a young wife’s day. And past is present in “Mourning,” where bit­ter­ness replaces sor­row after death in a fam­ily, and con­ven­tional behav­ior masks cru­elty and a thirst for revenge as the fam­ily mem­bers dis­guise and reveal their animosity.

Central expe­ri­ences, too com­plex for easy han­dling, have their place in all the sto­ries in this col­lec­tion. And the characters—quick, warm, and immediate—carry inti­ma­tions of strength and vital­ity into the reader’s life.

(1972)
Binding: Hardcover

View all of Sallie's online writing in her archives.

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