Because you don’t get through graduate school—much less motherhood—without alliances.
When Jill Mattison abruptly becomes both pregnant and single at the end of one spring semester, she and her two closest friends plunge headlong into an experiment in tri-parenting, tri-schooling, and tri-habitating as graduate students in Seattle. In a possibly crazy leap of faith, they acquire a big house, a new dog, and lots of tightly scheduled literature courses in fervent hope it will be enough to make a family.
Janey Duncan narrates The Atlas of Love with heartbreaking, heartwarming hilarity and shows how all their lives are forever changed by adventures in non-traditional parenting. Soon, these friends find their lives start to mirror their books, their books start to mirror their lives, and their alternative family becomes just as complicated as the traditional kind. And one tiny baby named Atlas upends and uplifts their entire world.
Like any good family drama, this one involves love affairs, Jewish grandmothers, Mormons, illness, betrayal, tests of the spirit (religious, emotional, and oral before a four-person examining committee), birth, death, and marriage, plus baseball, a gender-misidentified dog, and several dinner table smack downs. The Atlas of Love explores love and loss, friends and family and the fuzzy lines between the two, literature and pedagogy, and timeless mysteries such as who would you forgive for having you arrested and why must the Yankees always make the post-season.