The anthology comprises nine dramatic stories, taken together, spanning a century. In each story, a slice of life of various American women is revealed.
"Lucky Chow Fun" takes place in the mythical Templeton, the setting of her first novel. In this tale, seventeen-year-old Lollie hopes to leave for college without looking back, but sinister events end up causing her to fear for the safety of her little sister and the future of her once-safe little town.
"Majorette" is a story of a young woman's personal growth in Hershey, Pennsylvania and the events that make her more worldly and the father and grandfather that always hold their little girl in deep affection.
"Blythe" is the story of a bored, introverted Philadelphia attorney who has turned into a stay-at-home mom whose life changes when she takes a night class and meets an extroverted and eccentric woman who draws her out.
"The Wife of the Dictator" is a character study of a simple American girl who marries a Latin American dictator. Her fate is inexorably bound up with his.
"Sir Fleeting" is a story where a Midwestern farm girl on her honeymoon in Argentina falls into lifelong lust for a French playboy.
"Watershed" is a tragedy, between a husband and a wife, which proves the maxim "don't say things you'll later regret".
"Delicate Edible Birds" takes place during the fall of France. A disparate, but close group of War correspondents are held against their will by an evil French farmer who exacts a steep price in exchange for not turning them over to the Nazis.
Characters
Lollie, in "Lucky Chow Fun", is a seventeen-year-old high school senior hoping to leave for college without fear or regret, but suddenly finds her quaint small town to be a sinister place.
Aliette, in "L. Debard and Aliette", is a young woman, temporarily felled by polio, who falls in love with the older L.Debard.
Bern, in "Delicate Edible Birds", is a daring, attractive, female war correspondent, whose loss of personal honor in the name of the survival of others is an allegory for France herself.
Reviews
Delicate Edible Birds by Lauren GroffBook Review by Claire Hopely, Washington Times, February 22, 2009
"Delicate Edible Birds: And Other Stories" Book Review, Publishers Weekly, December 12, 2008