
On the release of her first novel in 1948, Elizabeth Spencer was
immediately championed by Robert Penn Warren and Eudora Welty, setting
off a remarkable career as one of the great literary voices of the
American South. Her career, now spanning seven decades, continues here
with nine new stories. In
Starting Over, Spencer returns to the deep
emotional fault lines and unseen fractures that lie just beneath the
veneer of happy family life. In "Sightings," a troubled daughter
suddenly returns to the home of the father she accidently blinded during
her parents' bitter separation; in "Blackie," the reappearance of a son
from a divorcee's first marriage triggers a harrowing confrontation
with her new family; while in "The Wedding Visitor," a cousin travels
home only to find himself entwined in the events leading up to a family
wedding. In these nine stories, Spencer excels at revealing the flawed
fabric of human relations.