56 pages 1 hour read

Between Sisters

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 2003

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Symbols & Motifs

Meg’s Condo

Content Warning: This section of the guide includes discussion of death.

Meg’s condo is symbolic of loneliness. It is in Seattle, Washington, and Meg lives there by herself. The interior of the condo is “beautiful and neat, with not so much as a paper clip out of place” (113). The space’s sterility echoes Meg’s social alienation. While she is proud of the career she’s established and the life she’s built, Meg often feels uncomfortable being in her own home. The space isn’t welcoming or comforting, and she has no one with whom to share it. The narrator’s descriptions of the space authenticate Meg’s fraught relationship with the condo:

The cleaning lady had been here today and carefully removed all evidence of Meghann’s natural disorder. Without the books and folders and papers piled everywhere, it had the look of an expensive hotel room. The kind of place people visited, not where they lived. A pair of blue-black brocade sofas faced each other, with an elegant black coffee table in between. The west-facing walls were solid glass (113).