cover image Paint the Bird

Paint the Bird

Georgeann Packard. Permanent, $28 (240p) ISBN 978-1-57962-317-3

Packard’s note to the reader at the end of the novel on the book’s typography serves to illuminate her attention to aesthetic detail throughout. The story reads like a prose poem—emotional significance comes across in the sparsely told daily machinations of the lives of a few intentionally but tenuously connected New Yorkers. Sarah is a lapsed minister, experiencing a mortal-world version of limbo. Adrift from her religion and her marriage, and increasingly irrelevant in her grown-up daughter’s life, she is aimlessly, persistently looking for something to hold onto. She clings to moments, recorded in joyful and precise detail, like a single meal at a dimly lit restaurant, or an encounter with a strange man. When she meets Abraham Darby, a gruff but sensuous artist, she willingly steps into his life, leaving hers behind for a night that turns into a weekend, and then merges into something more difficult to extricate herself from. Packard (Fall Asleep Forgetting) weaves a dreamy yet well-paced narrative with richly developed characters who gradually come to discover that life is always going on—whether they’re watching or not. (July)