cover image Ohio Angels

Ohio Angels

Harriet Scott Chessman. Permanent Press (NY), $24 (144pp) ISBN 978-1-57962-020-2

Nostalgia--the longing for a homecoming--draws the heroine of Chessman's lyrical debut back to the past in an Ohio town where time seems to stand still. When Virginia Greaves takes an overdose of sleeping pills, her daughter Hallie, a painter, comes home for a week of intensive soul searching and resumes a relationship with her childhood friend Rose. Hallie has been living in Brooklyn with her architect husband; a series of miscarriages has left her physically and emotionally drained. Back in her childhood home, she can't escape memories of her mother's ongoing struggle with depression and the stability she found at Rose's house. Time slips, and Hallie finds herself turning once again to Rose, who is expecting her third child and still living in the house where she grew up, haunted by the ghosts of her dead parents. Telling Hallie's story from several points of view, Chessman allows other characters to reveal their own hidden sadnesses and the sometimes oblique and pervasive effect these have on Hallie's life. Chessman's descriptions of life-altering events like the stillbirth of Virginia's second child (never revealed to Hallie) are passionate and chilling: ""I shook like a tree in a hurricane, and I said, Let me hold him, and when they had wrapped him in a blanket and I held him, he shook with me, two creatures in a high wind."" The losses suffered by Chessman's characters--greatest among these, the disintegration of married love--throw the emotional progress each makes into sharp relief. With gentle intelligence and the odd yet poetic accuracy of her prose, Chessman brings Hallie to recognize that opening up the chambers of the past is the only way to move on. (May)