Ethyl Mae Coco's rambling Victorian home on North Gladiola — the Main Street of Tula Springs, Louisiana — is the only residence left at the business end of town, but it's a hotbed for chaotic comedy. Mrs. Coco, aged fifty-seven and feeling somewhat left behind herself, directs her considerable energy into keeping those around her in line — her remote, obsessively bargain-hunting husband; members of the Pro Arts Quartet chamber music group, which Ethyl Mae aspires to turn into an accomplished cultural jewel; her six unruly grown children, none of whom keeps the Catholic faith to their staunch convert mother's satisfaction; and the other assorted, eccentric, and endearing people of Tula Springs. Nothing is simple — or quite as gossip portrays it — in Tula Springs, but after all upheavals and sunders pass, this wired family and community remain strongly connected.