The Dangers of Smoking is kind of an exciting collection of short stories by Argentinian author Mariana Enriquez, my first book by her. I had no idea what it was about but liked the cover, liked the title, and heard a bit of buzz. The stories are a blend of speculative fiction and horror--body horror, ghosts, missing children, ghost children, missing children coming back from the dead, ouija board contacts, lust, drugs, witchcraft, self harm. This is sort of like Shirley Jackson territory in a contemporary Argentina. There’s a kind of wild desperation in the stories. And the paranormal everywhere. And crazy passion. And maybe a touch of madness.
“Sometimes I think the crazies aren’t people, they’re not real. They’re like incarnations of the city’s madness, like escape valves. If they weren’t here, we’d all kill each other or die of stress.”
Two stories are about sexual fetishes. How do you get turned on? Feet? Earlobes? There’s always something fascinating and amusing to me about fetishes. In one story, "Where Are You, Dear Heart?", a woman has no interest in sexual intercourse, but she is crazy in lust for the sound of a human heart. She gets medical textbooks and looks at them, but when she hears beating hearts she goes off like the fourth of July. But it gets weirder and more disturbing as she is more turned on by heartbeats indicating defects, arrhythmia and so on. Sex with danger, right. She meets a guy who has had two heart surgeries and just listens to his heart, but then tries to manipulate it so it gets wilder. Masterfully strange story.
“Angelita Unearthed”: A girl finds baby bones in her grandma’s backyard, and there’s a baby ghost connected to it. Creepy and moving family history.
“The Dangers of Smoking In Bed”: Of course a woman dies, but others also smoke in bed. But the chief memory here is of nocturnal butterflies.
“Back When We Talked to the Dead”: Kids and a Ouija board and, you know, The Dead. Don’t do this at home, kids!
“Kids who Come Back”: Hundreds of kids who were missing come back, but how? Why? And why don’t their parents seem to want them back?! Mysterious and moving. Great story.
Each of the stories are narrated by a different young woman, all of whom live on the edge. I really liked it a lot. You can’t not listen to these women.