In her debut story collection, Julia Ridley Smith navigates the currents and eddies of desire, sex, love, and relationships.
These twelve highly accomplished stories are witty and accessible, intelligent and thought-provoking. A girls' week at the beach prompts hot tub drinking, awkward confessions, and a poignant reconsideration of friendship. A caregiver extracts a small repayment from her elderly patient for his long-forgotten role in the demise of her family. A young woman, new to New York City, finds herself in a complex but tacky love affair and reckons with the unfolding plot of her life. In the title story, a woman plots to conceive a second child while at a convention hotel with her husband and teenage daughter, both of whom have other plans. Smith’s stories will beguile and delight readers while at the same time exploring the deep and often difficult ties of family, marriage, and romantic love in modern life.
Realistically how many sex romps actually go right lol? I loved these short stories for their brilliance and ingenuity. They were hilarious. I can’t remember the amount of times I burst out in laughter. I can however remember how many times I smiled, which was about 90% of the book. It was awkward with just the right amount of realism.
I applaud Smith for her tanacity and creativeness as you flowed and ebbed between each story. I was taken aback, gleefully.
It was about unrequited love. A couple not being able to properly meet to schedule their rendezvous in order to conceive a second child. A woman having an affair with an older man while craving another. Not being able to forget a could-have-been love. It’s all about the failed attempts. A dazzling tale of various people and faces all vying for different goals and achieving none. A blast! I needed more.
A solid collection of short stories. Yes, the name of the collection is more of a click bait. The titular story is one where nobody, in fact, has sex (spoiler). These stories aren't lurid, they're what I would call commonplace. As in, they're about a variety of normal people, doing normal things. There wasn't a single story that I'd consider incredible, but they were pleasant to go through. I could read another dozen, easy.
This book had so many gripping stories, and a few really quirky ones. It also had so many characters that I really felt for. Overall a 3.75 stars for me, and I’d recommend it!
There is nothing better than a collection of short stories, spoken with the female voice. Though the title may fool you into thinking this is going to be a saucy beach read- it is nothing of the sort. This collection of stories is honest, authentic, and has no neatly tied bows. It is the raw female experience- as mother, daughter, lover, friend. The stories are simultaneously lovely and ugly- as is often the case with truth. Women are human. We do what we have to in this world. We don’t always want to be mother, daughter, lover, friend- under the microscope of men and societal expectations. We want the freedom to fuck up.
Lovely, witty writing. I am not typically a short story reader, but decided to give this one a try after recommendation from my local bookstore, M Judson. Glad I did.
"We felt we had a lot to be sad about, I guess. At least he did, and I caught it like the chicken pox."
Julia Ridley Smith's debut short story collection is funny and warm. In these twelve gripping stories about womanhood, marriage, family, friendships, desire, modern romance, the challenges of being alive, loss and regret there is much introspection being done by these characters, middle aged characters in that season of life and what it brings. I think what I liked most was these characters could have been anybody, they were diverse and ordinary everyday woman, mothers, wives, wanting things, sometimes getting thoes things, navigating life in all its challenges but written with wit and humor making it a delight to read!
This is a collection of about a dozen short stories and the title of the book is the title of one of the short stories which sounds much more titillating than it actually is. I think my favorite of the collection was Delta Foxtrot and the title story. That being said these stories were somewhat boring… one I ended up skipping entirely bc I just couldn’t get into it. The writer is definitely talented but not enough to hook me in (sadly the title of the book hooked me in enough to buy this…supporting an indie bookstore thank goodness bc it was not my best money spent on a book!)
I bought this book at a local bookstore because the author is from North Carolina and based on the title I thought it was going to contain spicy, juicy drama. Unfortunately for me, it’s not juicy, it’s not spicy, and I thought it to be mundane and pretty boring. I dragged myself through to finish. I think after reading this book, maybe short stories are not my vibe. I also think maybe women a generation older than me, with kids may enjoy it more than I did (as a childfree 35yo)
I reviewed this earlier and then deleted my original Goodreads account, so all my ratings disappeared! Oops!! Returning now to say: Julia Ridley Smith is a master of the short story. I loved this collection. So funny, so subtle, so wise. Such warmth, such knowing humor. Read this--you will love it too!
i must first say the title/cover design feel quite misplaced and unrepresentative of the contents!
a reminder that short stories are such a treat.
my favorites here were: Don't Breathe, Breathe; Sex Romp Gone Wrong; and Flown (which I'm realizing all share heavy mother-daughter/girlhood-to-womanhood themes with satisfying parallels between coming-of-age and aging)
This took me 8 months to passively finish but it was fun. Not amazing by any means but it was enjoyable to read a collection of short stories and made me feel super girly and I liked that. Women are dynamic!!!!
A brilliant, quite witty collection of stories by a dear friend, Julia, about the beauty and challenge and intensity of being alive -- eager to return to this book many times over!
The stories in Sex Romp Gone Wrong show off Smith’s talent for exploration, diversity, and introspection. And they are all connected through themes of desire, regret, loss, infatuation, spirituality, and more that women and children endure.