- “Outside the sliding door, the western sky is the color of an old bruise.”
- “It is nearly five o’clock and the sun beats like a fist against the top of her head.”
- “When the morning is still as a corpse.”
- “It is late June and the sun is murderous.”
- “The heat, its meanness and persistence.”
- “The sky turns the color of an old bruise, and they can see the dust cloud coming from fifty miles away…”
- “The sun and heat are without mercy, and the wind blows hot against their faces.”
Book Review: Relentless, Raw Outrage, Valentine by Elizabeth Wetmore
Valentine
by Elizabeth Wetmore
Harper, 306 pages, $26.99
Elizabeth Wetmore’s Valentine, set in 1976 rural West Texas, is a novel of relentless and brutally raw outrage. A fury-filled howl of women caught in a life and a world in which they are abused, ignored, patronized, debased, abandoned, threatened, harassed, demeaned, and exploited.
Valentine never lets up in its drive to depict the bitter desperation, anger, and isolation of a small group of women with awkwardly and haphazardly intertwined lives. One is able to flee, but at the cost of rending all ties with her young daughter. Another finds a way to self-respect and control of her life, but only through attempted murder. A third has to work feverishly to bury her past and maintain a brittle front of respectability and success.
At the core of this wrathful novel, though, are four women—Debra Ann, a preteen; Gloria, a 14-year-old Mexican girl; Mary Rose, a young mother; and Corrine, an elderly widow—who are overwhelmed at every turn by the circumstances of their male-dominated existence. The best they can offer each other is a hesitant companionship. But each remains scarred, isolated, and bereft. Valentine is not so much a novel as a primal scream. It opens with the aftermath of Gloria’s rape.
Wetmore, a West Texas native who now lives in Chicago, chronicles the unrelenting blows that these women take, and mirrors them in her descriptions of the landscape and natural world they inhabit: