Stern, Lindsay
"Ivan is a tightly wound philosophy professor whose reverence for logic and order governs not only his academic interests
but also his closest relationships. His wife
Prue
is quite the opposite: a pioneer in the emerging field of biolinguistics
she isyoung and beautiful
full of life and feeling. Thus far
they have managed to weather their differences. But lately
an odd distance has settled in between them. Might it have something to do with the arrival of the college's dashing but insufferable newwriter-in-residence
whose novel Prue always seems to be reading? Into this delicate moment barrels Ivan's unstable father-in-law
Frank
in town to hear Prue deliver a lecture on birdsong that is set to cement her tenure application. But the talk doesn't go as planned
unleashing a series of crises that force Ivan to finally confront the problems in his marriage
and to begin to fight - at last - for what he holds dear. A dazzlingly insightful and entertaining novel about the limitations of language
the fragility of love
and the ways we misunderstand each other and ourselves
The Study of Animal Languages marks the debut of a brilliant new voice in fiction"--