This was the PERFECT book to read during trying times, an escape from the real world. For me, these stories have an old-timey, Americana, almost fantastical feel, the characters existing in a world where much of the ugliness and pain lurks on the outskirts, never quite penetrating the bubble. These stories are about love, and especially lust, booze and crushes, first kisses on front porches, and the cat and mouse games boys and girls play. As Cross-Smith writes in the story, “You Got Me,” “The clacking of those pool balls was the soundtrack of our relationship,” and it often feels like the soundtrack of this collection too. There are men named Bo and Cash who have rough hands, ride motorcycles, and carry Swiss Army knives, men who lie under trucks and fix things, chivalrously light women’s cigarettes, and climb on roofs to hammer “in the wavy morning sun.” Men, who most importantly, don’t hurt women, but protect them. There are women who wear red lipstick and “shiny lip gloss,” flirt in low-cut tops, and read romance paperbacks. Make no mistake—the women in these stories are always in control. As Cross-Smith writes, “Men are most powerless when a woman pretends to be vulnerable because she is pretending and they are not.” There are bad men, womanizers and abusers, who do bad things, but Cross-Smith protects us, the reader, by mostly keeping them on the periphery. She writes, “She remembered seeing him with a woman, but maybe she was making that up. Everything before was on the other side of the champagne curtain.” Of course, Cross-Smith’s signature writing is beautiful and poetic throughout, and there are so many lines that crackle. She describes “goose bumps of rain popping on tent-skin,” mouths that taste like “the pepper-metal of vodka, the bright, starry bite of lime,” “breath sugar-heavy with blood-red wine and honey,” nightswimmers’ “tender splishes echoing off the white-weathered concrete and blackness,” “eighteen-year-old wink of night-black ink on amber milk-cream,” and the sunset light that “aches at the windows.” This is an excellent collection by an incredibly talented writer.