(7/18/2018)
It's Anne Tyler! Of course, it's good. In this case I would say one of her best books, better than her last two. All the good things about her writing are here. Typical of Anne Tyler there is not much plot but it is rich in details about other lives. Details that make you feel not only as if you know the person she is writing about but that occasionally, that person is you.
This story is told in two parts- Part One consists of 1967, 1977, 1997 and 2017. Part Two takes place in 2017 in (surprise) Baltimore. The stories from Part One tell you about the formative years and circumstances that help define Willa Drake and lead you to make assumptions about who she becomes. Despite having this background, as with other characters in Anne Tyler's books, the reader may not understand why Willa makes the decisions that she does. Some readers might find this to be a fault, but in real life, don't people often do the same? That is part of the beauty of her writing.
I am close in age to Anne Tyler and I believe that living through this time frame makes a difference in Willa's character development because of the way women were taught to behave during those decades. That is part of the reason I find this book to excellent. Anne Tyler invites you into a world that you don't want to leave. You become comfortable right from the beginning and want to stick around to see what happens. Her characters are realistic, flawed and in most cases likeable. "Clock Dance" returns to the theme that family is what you make it. I believe though, that new families can be just as flawed as the old ones and you might be better off working to fix what is wrong in the first place.