Christina Clancy
Central Library 201 W. Mifflin St., Madison, Wisconsin 53703

James Bartelt
A close-up of Christina Clancy.
Christina Clancy
A “separate but together” couple for 30 years faces hard truths upon relocating for the winter from Madison to Palm Springs, California, in The Snowbirds, the third novel by local author Christina Clancy (Shoulder Season). She captures the confusion and complexities of midlife with sass and heart while questioning whether there’s an expiration date on becoming a better person. The book hits shelves Feb. 4, and this event is part of the year-round Wisconsin Book Festival. Clancy — who splits her time between Madison and, you guessed it, Palm Springs — will be in conversation with fellow Madison novelist Chloe Benjamin (The Immortalists). Read Michael Popke’s preview here.
media release: The Last Thing He Told Me meets Fleishman Is in Trouble in this page-turning story of a couple who flee winter in the Midwest for Palm Springs, where they find their relationship at a crossroads.
Kim and Grant are at a turning point. A couple for thirty years, their "separate but together" partnership is running up against the realities of late middle age: Grant’s mother has died, the college where he taught philosophy was shuttered, and their twin girls are grown and gone. Escaping the bitter cold of a Midwestern winter for the hot desert sun of Palm Springs seems as good a solution as any to the more intractable problems they face.
When they arrive at Le Desert, a quirky condo community where everyone knows everyone’s business, Kim immediately embraces the opportunity to make new friends and explore a more adventurous side of her personality. Meanwhile, Grant struggles to find his footing in this unfamiliar landscape, leaving Kim to wonder if their relationship can survive the snowbird season. But when Grant goes missing on a hike in the Palm Springs mountains, Kim is forced to consider two terrifying outcomes: either Grant is truly lost, or this time, he’s really left her.
Is it ever too late to become the person we wanted to be—and is there still time to change into someone better? The exhilarating, but often confusing transitions of midlife are pitched against the promise and glamour of Palm Springs in this tender, honest story of what it takes to commit to someone for a lifetime. With compassion and humor, Clancy explores the redemptive power of finding ourselves, and of being found.
In conversation with Chloe Benjamin.
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Bob Koch