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Ivory Frame (yes, that's her name) is a young woman estranged from her family and enrolled in an art conservatory in Paris between the world wars. She is also an elderly biologist who has spent her adult life recording the languages of animals with the understanding that their existence is threatened by human encroachment and climate change. We get her story alternating in the present and the past. The Ivory of the present is shaken to receive a letter telling her she has a granddaughter, because she apparently has no child of her own. The book sets out to give us the context and the backstory for this letter, although Ivory's story meanders quite a bit in the process. She has a difficult love affair in her past, and a sympathetic assistant in the present, and the events and emotions seem to take place on an operatic level. I am generally one who appreciates melodrama, but I think it may be a bit overdone in this book. Still, there is a lot going on in The Dictionary of Animal Languages with ideas about the purpose of art, and the difference between art and science, or art and language. This is a rich book and I am glad I read it.