Items must be returned in new or unused condition and contain all original materials included with the shipment. More details
FINAL SALE EXCLUSION:
Items marked as FINAL SALE are not returnable unless the problem you experience is the result of our error.
* For your safety, some orders go through our loss prevention department. If we select your order for this process, we will immediately notify you that there may be up to a 3-day delay on your order.
** Most Oversize orders are delivered within 1-4 weeks. Some orders may take 6 weeks to be delivered.
Expedited Shipping:
We offer Next Day, 2 Day, and 3 Day shipping for most items. Expedited shipping is not available for items being shipped to PO Boxes or APO/FPO destinations. For more information on this please view our Expedited Shipping page.
More details
Credit Cards
Visa
MasterCard
American Express
Discover Card
Shop and pay online quickly and securely using your PayPal account.
6 Months | No Payments + No Interest if paid in full.
On orders over $150.
Subject to credit approval.
More details
Overstock.com® MasterCard®
0% Intro APR* on purchases for the first 6 billing cycles after your account is open.
Earn up to 8% in Rewards when you use your card at Overstock.com.
Earn 1% Rewards Dollars on everyday purchases.
Receive a $20 statement credit the first time you use your card.
Be the first to ask a question about this product.
Set in 1972, Ansay's debut novel revolves around Ellen Grier's struggle for liberation-liberation from her marriage to James, from her virtual enslavement to her sanctimonious, cruel in-laws and from what she see as the stultifying demands of her religion, Roman Catholicism. Financial difficulties have forced James and Ellen, along with their two children, to move back to the small Wisconsin town where they grew up and where they now share an acrimonious and joyless life with James's parents. Virtually every character is victimized by a private misery that causes pain and alienation and that in turn victimizes others. Ansay, who teaches creative writing at Vanderbilt, is adept at delineating these worlds of suffering, and her language can be both apt and beautiful. But she offers too many descriptions of the nightmares and waking bad dreams that seem to afflict all of her characters, and the reader begins to share the sense of being caught in a bad dream. As the story concentrates more on Ellen's search for identity-a familiar tale presented here in a familiar way-this sense of nightmare is intensified by an impression of dj vu. Though uneven, the novel offers glimpses of Ansay's potential to deliver a more coherent book next time. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved