![]() When the husband finally tries to wrest Chouette away from Tiny, it becomes a mortal battle between good and evil. ![]() Tiny feeds Chouette frozen pinkie mice, and she hunts gophers in the backyard. But encouraged by Tiny, Chouette is allowed to become her true self. ![]() Tiny’s husband, who insists on calling his daughter Charlotte, goes to great lengths to try to fix her, taking her to dicey doctors offering outlandish cures. When Chouette is born, she is indeed strange: winged, ferocious, and ugly. Tiny, an accomplished cellist, believes she has been impregnated by her “owl-lover” and that the baby inside her will most certainly be an “owl-baby.” Her husband fails to understand this, and Tiny leads the reader into the lonely terror she feels as she considers abortion, followed by her overwhelming, hormone-driven desire to have and protect the child. ![]() Oshetsky’s wild and phantasmagorical debut takes a Dantean journey through the violent fever dreams of a woman in the trials of pregnancy and early motherhood. ![]()
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