The Dancer and the Deep
(2026)

Fiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Dr. Patricia A. Farrell, 2026
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource (82 pages)

ISBN/ISSN
9798233572937 MWT19309751, 19309751
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

At eighty-two, Margaret Hale has made her decision: she's done. Done eating, done talking, done pretending that the fluorescent-lit nursing home room will ever feel like anything but a place to wait for the end. Her legs-once famous for dancing across Hollywood sound stages in sequined gowns-now lie motionless under thin blankets. The world has forgotten her, and she's decided to return the favor.Then comes the aquarium field trip she doesn't want to take.In a small tank in the children's section, Margaret meets a creature as lost as she is: a tiny striped octopus who hasn't emerged from her shell in over a week. The aquarium staff can't explain why the octopus stopped moving, stopped eating, stopped trying. But when Margaret reluctantly places her trembling hand against the glass, the impossible happens.The octopus comes out.What begins as a moment of curiosity becomes a weekly ritual that saves them both. Every Wednesday, Margaret returns to press her hands into the cold water, and every Wednesday, the octopus climbs into her palms-two dancers finding each other across an impossible divide. As their bond deepens, Margaret begins to remember what it feels like to matter. To be seen. To choose life when giving up would be so much easier.But Margaret isn't the only one watching. When a local news segment about the elderly woman and her octopus goes viral, it reaches someone Margaret never thought she'd hear from again: her estranged daughter Katherine, who hasn't spoken to her mother in six years.Now Margaret must decide if it's too late to emerge from more than one shell.The Dancer and the Deep is a tender, heartbreaking story about the courage it takes to be visible when the world has looked past you. Perfect for readers who loved A Man Called Ove and The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, this is a tale of second chances, unlikely friendships, and the fierce determination of one woman to prove that at eighty-two, her life isn't over-it's just beginning again.For anyone who has watched a mother, grandmother, or beloved elder slowly disappear into loneliness, this story offers something precious: hope that it's never too late to come back. P. A. Farrell is a psychologist and published author with McGraw-Hill, Springer Publishing, Cafe Lit, Ravens Perch, Humans of the World, Active Muse, Free Spirit Publishing, Scarlet Leaf Review, 100 Word Project, Woodcrest Magazine, Confetti, and LitBreak. She's a top health writer for M has published self-help books, and is a board member of Clinics4Life. She lives on the East Coast of the US

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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