This was a fun read. Lurie has been described as "one of America's most cerebral and sophisticated writers." It is possible to only read her fiction only as diversion - her writing is clean and straightforward; she doesn't throw around a bunch of 25c words. Her characters are relatable, nice and "ordinary." When I (stupidly) read Lorin Jones for the first time, I completely missed the satire. Why specifically women with the ghosts? There is an element of retribution or punishment - the ghosts are wreaking vengeance. Are there real fears unique to women that result in spectral interference? Fears of marrying the wrong man, of being punished for how we treat others, guilt associated w/ binge eating, the belief that inanimate objects have agency, that if we pray to the right gods we will be rewarded?
**spoiler alert**
There are 10 stories in this collection:
--Ilse's House - Ilse's ghost inadvertently(?) protects Dinah from marrying Greg, a selfish, childish misogynist; it isn't clear (other than the fact that Greg was good looking and popular w/ women) why the narrator is even with him in the first place. One reviewer compared this story to the tale of Bluebeard
--The Pool People - the two ghosts of disgruntled handymen pull their elitist homophobic homeowner nemesis into the pool, killing her at a pool party. This quote drove quiet self-reflection: "the town was supposed to be full of interesting types, but June didn't seem to have met any of them. Her acquaintances were all well-to-do retired people, mildly and monotonously interested in travel, real estate, hoe improvement, tropical gardening, and their own ailments."
--The Highboy
--Counting Sheep - a graduate turns into a sheep in order to stay in Wordsworth country
--In the Shadow - a haunted family ring kept by a rather cold callous pretty woman comes with the rude and offensive ghost of a deceased boyfriend. She covets designer clothing she cannot afford; she only has feeling/desire for things. A statement on consumerism?
--Waiting for the Baby - a couple tries to adopt a baby in India
--Fat People - a woman obsesses about a statement made by her husband that they should both try to lose weight
--Another Halloween
--The Double Poet - a famous poet believes she has a double who is showing up and pretending to be her, buying sweaters, signing books
--Something Borrowed, Something Blue
(I wouldn't describe these stories as "highly unconventional.")