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Eunice may -- or may not -- want life on a normal keel, but hers veers far from any bucolic family setting of the 1950s Midwest. When she moves with her mother to a new town, which is inundated by a flood, their lives diverge
-- and Eunice is befriended by Rose, who lives a spartan life in the woods. The last of the three parts of the novel finds Eunice with eyes for an attractive man named Fox. A bit of a local curiosity, he's in his late 30s, lives alone on a farm and has studied art, one of the self-taught Eunice's interests. There is an unsettling edge to the relationship
-- Eunice is a 16-year-old runaway when she arrives uninvited at his farmhouse one night. Moody, willful and unpredictable, as teenagers may be, Eunice is no easy catch, and neither is Fox. Engrossing to the end, this is a fine first novel. ___ Online:
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