MERMAIDS ON THE MOON
Elizabeth Stuckey-French, . . Doubleday, $21.95 (272pp) ISBN 978-0-385-49894-4
In this wonderfully quirky debut novel, 35-year-old France's mother, Grendy, inexplicably disappears from Mermaid City, Fla., where she has been performing with a small group of former "mermaids," leaving a note to her husband, a minister, claiming she has "to find herself." France leaves her home in Cedar Valley, Ind., and her charmingly offbeat, "downwardly mobile" boyfriend, Bruno, an artist who sculpts wooden dolls, to search for her mother. She remembers Grendy once saying, "Everything gets clear underwater. I'm happier underwater than I've ever been on land. It's my salvation." During France's journey, she, too, finds enlightenment underwater when she befriends her mother's mermaid performers and briefly becomes one herself. She also connects with her nephew, Theo (a young boy being raised by Grendy), who has singular emotional and behavioral problems. Stuckey-French, whose first collection of short stories,
Reviewed on: 06/03/2002
Genre: Fiction
Hardcover - 359 pages - 978-0-7862-4857-5
Other - 174 pages - 978-1-4000-7586-7
Paperback - 272 pages - 978-0-385-49897-5