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Capa de Life in the air ocean

a novel ·

Life in the air ocean

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In "Cave Fish," Daniel Mowry, Korean War veteran, expert in the design of domestic appliances (he tells himself he is making the world safe for women and children), is digging himself a real cellar, a crawl space below the kitchen …

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In "Cave Fish," Daniel Mowry, Korean War veteran, expert in the design of domestic appliances (he tells himself he is making the world safe for women and children), is digging himself a real cellar, a crawl space below the kitchen floor. It's his way out, a place where he can tunnel down when his baby begins to scream. In "Boy Wonder," it is 1937. Daniel is eleven and has a habit he can't beat. Sometimes he wakes up in the morning with the sheet plastered under him and turning cold. Daniel's mother says about it, "It's near every night with him. It's too hard." But Daniel sees a way out. He watches the crows fly swiftly from the yard and envies them. He's going to fly. He's going to be a Boy Wonder. In the title story, Iris is exhausted from the travails of early motherhood, and is driven further over the edge when her husband suggests that they move to South America. Taking us from 1937 to 1982, these stories explore the wilds of childhood and a barren landscape of adulthood, from the tar flats of Tennessee to the lush countryside of Bogota, Colombia, where the Mowrys go to live in the early sixties in an attempt to bring their world into line. But no matter what they do to escape one another, they find themselves back together - a closed-in society of four. Theirs is a precipitous love that both cements the family and rends them apart, a love that the Mowry daughters endure and rebel against, each to reinvent her own.

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Margaret's verdict

"In "Cave Fish," Daniel Mowry, Korean War veteran, expert in the design of domestic appliances (he tells himself he is making the world safe for women and children), is digging …"

— Margaret

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