| Description:
 
 There is no one in contemporary literature quite like Barbara  Kingsolver. Her dialogue sparkles with sassy wit and earthy poetry; her  descriptions are rooted in daily life but are also on familiar terms with the  eternal. With Prodigal Summer, she returns from the Congo to a "wrinkle on the map  that lies between farms and wildness." And there, in an isolated pocket of  southern Appalachia, she recounts not one but three intricate stories.
  Exuberant, lush, riotous--the summer of the novel is "the season of extravagant  procreation" in which bullfrogs carelessly lay their jellied masses of eggs in  the grass, "apparently confident that their tadpoles would be able to swim  through the lawn like little sperms," and in which a woman may learn to "tell  time with her skin." It is also the summer in which a family of coyotes moves  into the mountains above Zebulon Valley:   The ghost of a creature long extinct was coming in on silent footprints,  returning to the place it had once held in the complex anatomy of this forest  like a beating heart returned to its body. This is what she believed she would  see, if she watched, at this magical juncture: a restoration. The "she" is Deanna Wolfe, a wildlife biologist observing the coyotes from her  isolated aerie--isolated, that is, until the arrival of a young hunter who makes  her even more aware of the truth that humans are only an infinitesimal portion  in the ecological balance. This truth forms the axis around which the other two  narratives revolve: the story of a city girl, entomologist, and new widow and  her efforts to find a place for herself; and the story of Garnett Walker and  Nannie Rawley, who seem bent on thrashing out the countless intimate lessons of  biology as only an irascible traditional farmer and a devotee of organic  agriculture can. As Nannie lectures Garnett, "Everything alive is connected to  every other by fine, invisible threads. Things you don't see can help you  plenty, and things you try to control will often rear back and bite you, and  that's the moral of the story."   Structurally, that gossamer web is the story: images, phrases, and events  link the narratives, and these echoes are rarely obvious, always serendipitous.  Kingsolver is one of those authors for whom the terrifying elegance of nature is  both aesthetic wonder and source of a fierce and abiding moral vision. She may  have inherited Thoreau's mantle, but she piles up riches of her own making,  blending her extravagant narrative gift with benevolent concise humor. She  treads the line between the sentimental and the glorious like nobody else in  American literature. --Kelly Flynn
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