Fic­tion

Enor­mous Wings

  • Review
By – June 15, 2026

After a minor fend­er-ben­der, sev­en­ty-sev­en-year-old Pep­per Mills is com­pelled by her wor­ried chil­dren to move into an assist­ed liv­ing facil­i­ty. Once there, she strikes up a roman­tic rela­tion­ship with her charm­ing neigh­bor, and, soon after, finds out she is pregnant.

Enor­mous Wings begins with a premise so wild­ly improb­a­ble that it is almost unbe­liev­able. The sec­ondary char­ac­ters (Pepper’s fam­i­ly and new friends) are chaot­ic and quirky. The doc­tors over­see­ing her care range from car­toon­ish­ly evil to down­right saint­ly. And yet, despite the book’s absurd foun­da­tion and its eccen­tric cast — or, more like­ly, because of both — this is a deeply mov­ing sto­ry that encour­ages read­ers to con­sid­er and appre­ci­ate our col­lec­tive humanity.

When a nov­el opens with a bang, the ini­tial spark some­times sput­ters out. But Frankel’s sto­ry does the oppo­site. With every page turned, read­ers are gift­ed with new con­nec­tions and increas­ing­ly mean­ing­ful insights. When Pepper’s teenage grand­daugh­ter Lola finds her­self with an unwant­ed preg­nan­cy, it is up to Pep­per to find the strength and the means to accom­mo­date Lola’s deci­sion to ter­mi­nate it. When Pepper’s octo­ge­nar­i­an friend Dot is dying, Pep­per must accept Dot’s deci­sions, too — not only to throw Pep­per a baby show­er as a front for deliv­er­ing her last good­byes, but also to live the days she has left on her own terms for as long as she can.

Choice, of course, is at the heart of this sto­ry. By set­ting it in Texas, with all of the social and polit­i­cal com­pli­ca­tions that entails, Frankel forces read­ers to face urgent ques­tions of female auton­o­my, repro­duc­tive rights, pri­va­cy, and what it tru­ly means to val­ue life. 

When we first meet Pep­per, she has been recent­ly stripped of her inde­pen­dence. Her driver’s license has been tak­en from her, her home has been sold, her belong­ings con­densed. By encum­ber­ing her with a geri­atric preg­nan­cy, her dwin­dling auton­o­my shrinks even fur­ther. Between her advanced age, the laws of her state, her doc­tors’ con­cerns, and the sen­ti­ments of her fam­i­ly and her boyfriend, Pep­per is left with­out many options. Yet, some­how, she main­tains her good humor, her empa­thy, and her capac­i­ty for forgiveness.

Pep­per may be an unlike­ly new moth­er, but she is far from an unlike­ly hero. With her wide range of life expe­ri­ence (she’s a retired Eng­lish teacher, a can­cer sur­vivor, a divorced moth­er of three, and a grand­moth­er) comes wis­dom, grit, and under­stand­ing. She has been through too much already to let a lit­tle thing like a sur­prise preg­nan­cy take her down.

Enor­mous Wings is a thought­ful, sin­gu­lar sto­ry, filled with Frankel’s trade­mark sparkle and heart.

Lyn­da Cohen Loigman, a grad­u­ate of Har­vard Col­lege and Colum­bia Law School, is the author of four nov­els, includ­ing The Two-Fam­i­ly House and The Matchmaker’s Gift. Her most recent nov­el, The Love Elixir of Augus­ta Stern, was an Ama­zon Editor’s Pick, an Octo­ber 2024 Book of The Month Club selec­tion, and a final­ist for the Goodreads 2024 Choice Awards in His­tor­i­cal Fiction.

Discussion Questions