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320 pages, Paperback
First published December 31, 2002
But Coco can't shake the impression that [Catherine Stravinsky's] intellect has been won at the expense of vitality and life. She hates sickness in people, and is slow to tolerate their ills. If she's honest with herself, it's also got something to do with class. Coco sees in Catherine the anaemia of the upper orders, the thinness of blue blood, the weakness of an aristocracy that has had its arrogance exposed.
Her attitude is complicated, too, by the fact that, when she was eleven, she watched her own mother succumb agonisingly to consumption. Now part of her feels resentful that Catherine is so pampered, while her mother died with a quickness reserved for the lonely and impoverished.