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There is nothing remarkable about the plot of Sue Millers graceful novel, The World Below . Cath Hubbard, a San Francisco woman in her 50s, returns to her grandmothers small Vermont house after the death of an aunt who left the property to Cath and her brother Lawrence. Cath had lived with her grandparents for a few years in her teens, after her mothers suicide, and now There is nothing remarkable about the plot of Sue Millers graceful novel, The World Below . Cath Hubbard, a San Francisco woman in her 50s, returns to her grandmothers small Vermont house after the death of an aunt who left the property to Cath and her brother Lawrence. Cath had lived with her grandparents for a few years in her teens, after her mothers suicide, and now makes her wounded way back, in the wake of a divorce, to sort through her memories of her beloved grandmother, Georgia. This is the standard fare of American literary fiction: a life change prompting a search into the past. What is far less ordinary is Millers placid, nuanced depiction of her protagonists emotional journey. None of Caths feelings can be easily predicted by the reader, but all of them ring true. She finds her grandmothers diary and begins to fill in the stories that Georgia had hinted at over the years. What Cath discovers in her grandmothers journal is a secret that has lost its power to shock; and that very wearing away of taboo adds to the poignancy of Georgias restricted life. Her story unfolds against a backdrop of Caths more immediate griefs and concerns and begins to recede as Caths San Francisco life returns to claim her. Millers prose appears effortless, but is like the gestures of a magician that conceal how the trick is accomplished. The result is a sage, continually surprising novel about finding peace of mind in a combination of habit, love, and self-determination. --Regina Marler
There is nothing remarkable about the plot of Sue Millers graceful novel, The World Below . Cath Hubbard, a San Francisco woman in her 50s, returns to her grandmothers small Vermont house after the death of an aunt who left the property to Cath and her brother Lawrence. Cath had lived with her grandparents for a few years in her teens, after her mothers suicide, and now There is nothing remarkable about the plot of Sue Millers graceful novel, The World Below . Cath Hubbard, a San Francisco woman in her 50s, returns to her grandmothers small Vermont house after...
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