Not yet finished but as I am reading these stories intermittently I want to post on them when they are fresh in my mind.
To Buffalo Eastward by Gabriel Bump follows a young man on a road trip. A young woman he had been with is marrying another and he is searching for…something. Stopping overnight in Cleveland he falls in with a few strangers at a bar that leads to a night of silliness, drugs, and light breaking and entering.
The Miracle Girl by Rita Chang-Eppig seems very familiar. But having been published in a small literary magazine I do not know how that could be so. It tells the story of two young girls in Taiwan after the communist revolution in China. The girls go to a Catholic charity school and the older has been blessed /afflicted with a stigmata that is bringing a great deal of exposure to the community and jealousy from her younger sister.
Our Children by Vanessa Cuti is unsettling to say the least. Narrated by a woman who admits she left her first husband because she did not know what marriage was supposed to be. Now with another husband she feels no happier. Each with two children every other weekend becomes a circus of young people. On a weekend when they take the kids, aged 7, 7, 6, and 5 camping she wakes up in a contagious fever dream. She wants to leave the children in the wild and escape with her husband back to civilization with no responsibility. They do so, leaving the kids sleeping and driving home to a night of drinking and mobile sex. Fortunately she wakes up before dawn and races back to the campground to find the children still sleeping,
no worse for ware or imbibed with the knowledge of what she almost did
The Rest of Us by Jenzo Duque follows four young Hispanic boys in the Chicago projects who grow up together. This is such a foreign experience for someone like me it is hard to read it as enjoyable fiction. It is crazy that the place described is normal for so many people.
Escape From The Dysphesiac People by Brandon Hobson : Definitely harder story to connect with. Our narrator is an Indian boy who has been removed from his home and family and placed on a work camp of sorts with other Indigenous people. The white men who run it seem to speak a different language, English but broken with lots of guttural exclamations. One wonders if what we are reading is not so much what they say but what our young man hears from their accents. As he sleeps he is visited by ghosts of those Indians who walked the Trail of Tears long ago. They tell him to escape which he does. Odd, interesting, but tough to connect with
Playing Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain by Jamil Jan Kachai : A teenage boy is excited to get the newest version of his favorite video game. His parents, Afghani refugees now in the states do not approve but he cannot help himself. When he begins playing the game he realizes the world of the game is in Afghanistan. Using free play mode he travels to his fathers village and in face sees a younger version of his Father, and his deceased Uncle ( whom he never met). He attempts to save them from the Russian invaders.
Switzerland by Nicole Krauss : A woman recalls her time spent in a Swiss boarding school. Arriving late that year she ended up staying in a house with two older girls and the house’s matron. The girls eighteen were both very kind but she observed things, the way the older girls acted. Soraya was a girl who already had bad habits with men. She exerted her control by giving it up. A fairly dark story.
Clementine, Carmelita, Dog by David Means : One can find thousands, countless books and stories with anamorphic animals. That is why this story of a dog, narrated by a human in what he calls his best translation of what a dog feels is so special. Clementine is a Daschound that lives with Norman. Through her memory of smells we learn that Norman is a widower and is very sad. When Clementine gets lost in the park one day after chasing a rabbit she is adopted by another family. Eventually he finds her way back to Norman. Told in a delightfully descriptive way.
Paradise by Yxta Maya Murray : Excellent narrative about a middle aged Native American woman escaping from the Paradise fire with her racist 80 year old father in law and her young daughter. Fast moving and compelling
Eloghosa Osunda writes “ Good Boy. I found it to be just about unreadable.
Portrait of Two Young Ladies in White and Green Robes by Jane Pek : Interesting story narrated by a an immortal spirit. Back in the sixteenth century two spirits were painted. Now centuries later our narrator, the one spirit, remembers the choice her friend made, to give up her immortal life to marry a human and have a child. She died and her friend has missed and regretted that for centuries though she has tracked the descendant of that human child.
The Last Days of Rodney by Tracey Rose Peyton : Excellent take on the days before the end of Rodney King’s life. A fictionalized account certainly but one that feels like it could well be true.
In This Sort of World, the Asshole Wins by Christa Romansky : This is another story that, while it’s perspective inevitably has merit, did not work for me. Telling the tale of a young woman widowed by drugs she herself is still using and not being a great mother. Fortunately her parents have her and her toddler son living with them but they are at the end of their rope with her.
Love Letter by George Saunders : I had read this when it originally published and it’s impact has not lessened one bit. Simply marvellously done. At a point sometime in the future a grandfather is writing to his grandson. He is offering advice on a moral decision the grandson is having to consider regarding friends of his. Moreover though, he is answering the grandsons rebuke of how his grandparents ( and their generation) allowed America to sink into the fascist system it exists in at the time of the story’s unfolding. Clearly a rebuke to both the Trump administration and, perhaps even more, those on the left who could not be bothered to act to stop it. Prescient then. Even more prescient now.
A Way With Bea by Shanteka Sigers : Excellent story of a high school teacher haunted by one of her children. The girl Bea comes from a very tough home. The sort where the school knows there is no use in sending communication home to parents. Our teacher is just glad when she shows up, whatever her state. Her attempts to reach her are so relatable
Haguillory by Stephanie Soileau: Strong story that is all about the vibe and environment of New Orleans. A bit dark.
You Are My Dear Friend by Madhuri Vijay : Geeta is a 29 year old au pair working for an English couple in India. They treat her very well. After her parents were killed in an accident she had been raised by nuns in an orphanage. At a party her employers have an older Indian man takes note of her. A relationship develops. It becomes unhappy. She discovers
she cannot have children. They adopt. That does not work out well either
Palaver by Bryan Washington has a black man, a gay man, has his Mother visiting in Japan. The man tells her pieces of his history, some of it shocking to her. She does not reciprocate as he would like but we, as the reader
, are told what she is thinking in the vein of “ she didn’t tell him that ….”
Biology by Kevin Wilson : A very strong story. A man sees on Facebook one night that his favorite teacher, his eighth grade biology teacher, has passed away. Seeing this man as he appeared twenty some odd years ago to him brings a profound sadness. He thinks of who he himself was at that time. An unhappy, confused, unpopular boy. And the kindness of the teacher made a difference even though, as even he as a boy observed, the teachers life was not all that he might have wanted. Now, older, happy, he realizes that he cannot make his partner understand his feelings about that teacher. As a reader I also feel his feelings with the teacher also bring sadness remembering the pain of his life then. As he writes “ And eventually I stopped thinking so much about Mr. Reynolds, because thinking about him meant thinking about that time in my life. And he just sat there, in this little tiny piece of my heart. And he never changed either. And now he was dead.”
Little Beast by C Pam Zhang : A dark story. A young teen girl is a scholarship student at a progressive school. Her father is the night janitor and at times he mortified her. Her Mother died giving birth to her and it has always been just them, her Father always attempting to do his best by her. At this school most of the students are extremely privileged and while they are not unkind to her their solicitousness feels unkind to her. She gravitates to a ground of troubled students. To be accepted there however she has to have issues that fit. Cutting herself, is not enough. Eventually she tells untrue stories a out her father. This leads to a bad, if unfinished as to the story ending.
For me, without a doubt, the stories by David Means, George Saunders, and Kevin Wilson are far and away superior to anything else in the collection.