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The Folded World

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From the author of the critically acclaimed Sea Wife
Praised for her exquisite prose and crystalline insights, Amity Gaige returns with The Folded World, the story of an idealistic young social worker drawn into the lives of his mentally ill clients.
Charlie Shade was born into a quiet, prosperous life, but a sense of injustice dogs him. He feels destined to leave his life of "bread and laundry," to work instead with people in crisis. On his way, he meets his kindred spirit in Alice, a soulful young woman, living helplessly by laws of childhood superstition. Charlie's empathy with his clients—troubled souls like Hal, the high-school wrestling champion who undergoes a psychotic break, and Opal, the isolated young woman who claims "various philosophies have confused my life"—is both admirable and nearly fatal. An adoring husband and new father, Charlie risks his own cherished, private domestic world to help Hal, Opal, and others move beyond their haunted inner worlds into the larger world of love and connection.

A collision of extraordinary characters, The Folded World addresses the universal dilemma of love, wherein giving to another can seem like "the death of the world of oneself." With an unerring eye for both the joys and devastations of life, Amity Gaige once again reminds us of the pleasures and depths to be found in her fiction.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 12, 2007
      Gaige follows up on the 2006 National Book Foundation "5 Under 35" selection O My Darling
      with a measured account of a mildly troubled marriage and the hurdles faced by well-meaning social caseworkers. Gorgeous and dark-haired Alice Bussard, the 22-year-old daughter of a librarian, leaves "shabby" hometown Gloucester, Mass., to find bigger and better in a nearby (and unnamed) city. What she finds, however, is a job as a dentist's receptionist and the attention of 25-year-old, big-eared Midwestern transplant Charlie Shade, who is finishing his master's in social work. Before long, they're married and Charlie's found an underpaid and overworked job. They have twins, and Charlie's dedication to his work—and two patients, Hal Kramer and Opal Ludlow, specifically—sparks domestic tension (Alice is predictably tempted by another man), professional trouble and physical danger. Alice's mother comes to help with the kids, but ends up sharing with Alice the truth Alice would rather not hear about the father she never knew. Gaige's sophomore effort is polished and competent, with measured doses of dry humor leavening overwrought prose . Details about the mechanisms of the social work system are convincing, as is Gaige's portrayal of a young marriage on the rocks, but the narrative may be too tidy for some.

    • Library Journal

      March 1, 2007
      We've all heard the truism that the devil is in the details. For novelist Gaige, whose "O My Darling" was a winner of the National Book Foundation's first 5 Under 35 award, these details are hidden in the folds of everyday life. Protagonist Charlie Shade, a young social worker, is attempting to balance his job as part of a mobile mental-health team with his responsibilities to his family. It's not easy. Eager to prove his competence as a clinician, he virtually ignores his stay-at-home wife and twin daughters. When the inevitable crisis hits, the novel brings readers into the center of the maelstrom. From here, it explores dozens of themes: boundary setting, fidelity, loyalty, compromise, self-preservation, the changing nature of love, and personal growth, among others. Gorgeous prose and unusual characters combine to make this an intriguing and captivating look at the ways traditional gender roles skew adult relationships. Indeed, it is exhilarating to see Alice, the horrifyingly passive wife, transform herself into a competent woman. This alchemy, in concert with a beautiful story wonderfully told, makes this highly recommended for all fiction collections.Eleanor J. Bader, Brooklyn

      Copyright 2007 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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