cover image The Orange Tree

The Orange Tree

Mildred Walker, , edited by Carmen Pearson. . Univ. of Nebraska, $24.95 (310pp) ISBN 978-0-8032-9864-4

Known in the mid-20th century for her American chronicles (Winter Wheat ; Fireweed ), Walker (1905–1998) was unable to publish this 1970s tale of two couples' unlikely friendship during her lifetime. (As Pearson, her editor, notes in the brief introduction, Walker revised it over two decades.) Newlyweds Olive and Ron Fifer live in a Boston apartment adjacent to Tiresa and Paulo Romano, an English professor and eye doctor who are a generation older. Olive tries to fit the mold of a typical housewife, while dull Ron climbs the corporate ladder by day and settles in front of the TV at night. Olive's sense of inarticulate yearning is heightened by her pregnancy, which she considers terminating "if Ron would hear of it." In the elevator, Tiresa, who is in poor health, confesses to Olive that she once lost a child (a confession she regrets almost immediately), initiating an intimacy that soon takes on a life of its own. As the couples come to know each other, their lives and marriages change irrevocably. In a manner reminiscent of Paula Fox (particularly in the dialogue), Walker delineates her characters with surety, unspooling Olive and Tiresa's insights on sex, class, gender roles, age and each other. (Sept.)