Bonnie-Sue Hitchcock's beautifully written short story collection is a revelation, set in American small towns and communities of Alaska and the American west, focusing on young people, with characters and events that connect, and reverberate across the stories. Gina is still grieving the loss of her mother, and enraged at how easily her father seems to have forgotten her with his new girlfriend, Libby and her young daughter, Poppy, with her invisible friend, Elizabeth, a mermaid. Two girls who grow up together, are 'home schooled', in the Sea-Shaken Houses on a remote coast, wonder about the identity of their fathers, with a Jane dedicated to learning about molluscs, knowledge that helps diagnose the amnesiac Conrad making his way to a Canadian uncle living with a man, to seek advice, to ask whether it is possible to love whoever you want to in this world.
These are stories of secrets, memories, betrayal, sexuality, sexual abuse by Catholic priests who never face justice, who just keep being moved, only to perpetrate their crimes on other young people, of families that are more concerned about mixing with the right people rather than addressing a daughter being abused, blaming her instead, a daughter for whom making a chain from gum wrappers becomes a obsessive meditation. Her broken brother becomes a rodeo star, a route to disguising his inner despair. There is rage, retribution, abduction and murder of a 6 year old girl, and wildfires that mean evacuation, small communities that trust their own above any experts, particularly if they are well qualified, a backbone trust that is to unravel in a nightmarish way. Lared in Montana is a town drunk on basketball, with only Lilian as the exception. And sisters should never leave their sisters.
Hitchcock's short vibrant stories are impressive and unforgettable, generating a rollercoaster of emotions, with their wide cast of characters, portraying the universal commonalities of young peoples' experiences, the best and the very worst, their families, and the small town American communities in which they live. I found the stories utterly engaging, compulsive and riveting reading, and I cannot recommend them highly enough. Many thanks to Faber and Faber for an ARC.