One of those daughters is Vivian. The reader is with her as she self-medicates with UDLs, regrettable sexual encounters and Dolly magazines. Later, when Vivian is 23, the reader is there when she discovers she is unexpectedly pregnant. When the baby, Evie, is born, the reader is in the room as Vivian almost falls asleep standing up with the baby in her arms. When she feels like her “scalp has slipped off, that her brain has been exposed to the air, to the tick tick ticking of the termites”. The pages describing the corporeality and vulnerability of the post-partum period are achingly potent.