On the surface this book is about college life in the American south in the 1950s, during one sweltering summer session. The story goes beyond that and it becomes a story of one woman’s experience of awakening. When I was at college, a class included study of Plato’s Allegory of the Cave and the main character’s experiences remind me of that—once she sees ‘beyond the shadows’ of her carefully prescribed life, she can’t ‘un-see’ it; and what she sees takes root within her and begins to change the attitudes and beliefs she was given and had previously accepted without question. She begins to question.... and all hell breaks loose. haha Once her eyes are opened so to speak, she begins to make choices, some of which come into conflict with the life she has been living and is expected to live. We watch her grow into her own person, despite the consistent pressure from others to maintain the status quo. This book shows the prescribed roles women were expected to live at the time, and how limited the choices were. Through side characters we see the later stages of those roles and the effects it has had on the women in them. Throughout the book the burgeoning civil rights movement of the time is often a catalyst to the plot and seemed almost like another character in the book; and it was fascinating to note parallels to the current political climate. And one completely random thought about the book: I was struck by one of the most seemingly realistic depictions of depression, which occurs later on in the book, that I think I have ever read.