cover image THE WAY OF WOMEN

THE WAY OF WOMEN

Lauraine Snelling, . . WaterBrook, $13.99 (384pp) ISBN 978-1-57856-787-4

The 1980 Mount St. Helens eruption provides the backdrop for this uneven exploration of the resiliency of women by bestselling inspirational novelist Snelling (The Healing Quilt ). The characters all have potential: Melissa "Mellie" Sedor and her husband, Harvey, are trying to afford the expensive treatments their small daughter, Lissa, needs to survive leukemia, and Harvey is prepared to make the ultimate sacrifice. Katheryn Sommers's depressed husband, David, and 10-year-old son, Brian, are off on a camping trip just as an eruption seems imminent. Capt. Mitchell Ross is hooked on danger and still has an eye for a beautiful girl—even if she's not his wife. Model-turned-photographer Jenn Stockton leaves New York to return to the mountain and revisit an old love. Cowlitz County Sheriff Frank McKenzie seeks to erase his recurring nightmare of his family's murder with plenty of bourbon. The lives of these characters all intersect, of course, when the volcano erupts. There's a promising metaphor for one woman's pregnancy in the volcano's "labor" pains, but the mountain's "point of view" presented throughout the book jars (" 'Creator of all things, I ache,' she screamed."). The pacing drags in the middle of the novel, and a particularly gruesome disclosure may startle readers. Laudably, Snelling does not offer a happily-ever-after pat ending, but readers may find themselves dissatisfied. Agent, Deirdre Knight. (June)