Her oldest friend’s husband, now widowed, is interested in something more than friendship with her. In Somerset, Stella once again finds an opportunity to become part of the web of relationships that make for human society. She has spent her life studying communities of peopletheir families, social structures, how they welcomed outsiders into their midstremaining an observer, privileged to share in their intimate life but not obliged, and finally unwilling, to tie herself closely to any lover, friend or social group. The drama of life in the West Country alternates with Stella’s powerfully vivid memories of lovers, friends, and her anthropological sojourns in such exotic places as the Nile Valley in Egypt, the island of Malta, and among farmers in the Orkney Islands off the coast of Scotland. At age sixty five, retired anthropologist Stella Brentwood buys a cottage in Somerset, England, and slowly acquires neighbors, a dog, and a professional curiosity about the country village where she intends to settle and put down roots for the first time.
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