The Descent Of Love Darwin And The Theory Of Sexual Selection In American Fiction 1871 1926 Today

“They were speculative,” she said.

The professor’s new assistant, Julian Croft, arrived from Baltimore with a freshly printed degree and a habit of leaning too close when Clara pointed out the covert barbs on a male tanager. He was handsome in a way that seemed almost performative—wide shoulders, a voice that resonated like a tuning fork, and eyes the color of well-worn mahogany. The other women in the boardinghouse whispered about him. Clara measured him the way she measured everything: by deviation from the mean.

“Congratulations.”

Then she began to draw the wing of a female sparrow—drab, precise, and perfectly adapted for flight.