"Ingalls writes fables whose unadorned sentences belie their irreduciblestrangeness. In her grim yet playful fashion, Ingalls is concerned with the rulesand conventions by which societies are organized, the violent machinationsby which they are maintained. Like a good tragedian, she tends to heap upcorpses at the end of her tales, and even in her quieter examinations of familialbonds she leaves readers to wonder, of her spouses and siblings, who mightpush whom off a cliff."