"Mildred Walker writes with an intensity and quiet fire about the life predicaments of her characters. The publication of <i>The Orange Tree</i> is an occasion for rejoicing."—David Budbill, author of <i>While We've Still Got Feet</i>
<p>"Known in the mid-20th century for her American chronicles <i>(Winter Wheat; Fireweed),</i> Walker (1905-1998) was unable to publish this 1970s tale of two couples’ unlikely friendship during her lifetime. Newlyweds Olive and Ron Fifer live in a Boston apartment adjacent to Tiresa and Paulo Romano, an English professor and eye doctor who are a generation older. . . . As the couples come to know each other, their lives and marriages change irrevocably. In a manner reminiscent of Paula Fox (particularly in the dialogue), Walker delineates her characters with surety, unspooling Olive and Tiresa’s insights on sex, class, gender roles, age and each other."—<i>Publishers Weekly</i></p>