cover image HOME AWAY FROM HOME

HOME AWAY FROM HOME

Lorna J. Cook, Jane Lorna Cook, . . St. Martin's, $22.95 (208pp) ISBN 978-0-312-30819-3

Cook takes a careful but sometimes smothering look at grief in her second novel (after 2004's Departures ), as a 30-something Michigander mourns the untimely loss of her beloved husband. After Dill's death from a brain aneurysm, Anna Rainey finds herself emotionally unable to stay in their home. She wanders from friends' sofas to a dormitory room to a small apartment, sometimes experiencing visitations from Dill's ghost and often feeling guilty: her failure to fix the garage door may have kept him from getting to the hospital in time. As if her grief makes her a magnet for tragedy, Anna befriends Jay, who hit a boy with his car in bad weather, putting the boy in a coma; she also helps counsel Sheena, an Upward Bound kid who's lost her father, and tutors Celia, a 10-year-old struggling to cope with her mother's death. Anna's mother, too, can't quite let go of Anna's father, who died nine years earlier. It takes gumption to let one's characters roam about unhinged and inconsolable, recovering only on their own terms and in their own sweet time, and in doing so, Cook paints a lucid and realistic portrait of loss. But she also creates a slightly wearying read: all unhappy families may be unhappy in their own ways, but young widows mourn—and eventually heal—in fairly routine fashion. Agent, Lisa Bankoff . (Jan.)