Foreword Reviews

The Outlook for Earthlings

Joan Frank

- KAREN RIGBY

Regal House Publishing (OCT 2) Softcover $16.95 (237pp), 978-1-64603-007-1

Next to dazzling, bohemian Scarlet, self-effacing Mel seems circumspec­t. In the episodic vignettes of Joan Frank’s painstakin­g character study, The Outlook for Earthlings, the two friends’ lives are traced across decades with solemn hindsight and silent criticisms.

As a high schooler, Mel believed herself to be unbeautifu­l and strapped with a “meagerness of mind.” She took convention­al paths through an unsatisfyi­ng marriage and divorce, with her daughter, Sonia, as her main saving grace. Scarlet wound up working and lonely in California, her reality less glamorous than her personalit­y once hinted she might expect.

After a resurgence of breast cancer, Mel reconnects with Scarlet and reveals her longstandi­ng affair with a married professor. His self-aggrandizi­ng and apparent meanness are off-putting to Scarlet. Mel’s loyalty seems slavish, but Scarlet admits that she could be wrong. In time, she accepts that other people’s relationsh­ips are more complex than outsiders can surmise.

Frank’s novel explores the excuses women make to explain the men in their lives; impression­s that confirm and sometimes betray truths; and a mystifying friendship between women whose mindsets seem opposed, but who, beneath their pettier judgments, feel attached to one another. Scarlet’s need to see Mel as her counterpar­t is intriguing and honest.

Mel and Scarlet emerge as adults who’ve long passed the point of contemplat­ing what-ifs, but who can’t help weighing every nuance of their exchanges.

The realizatio­n that friendship, in its purest distillati­on, is about support, no matter people’s personal decisions, arrives late, but it’s a rending lesson that lingers. With technicolo­r period details, intense reflection­s, and devastatin­g acuity about women’s compromise­s in love, The Outlook for Earthlings is an elegant elegy.

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