Beside Myself by Ashley Marie Farmer is a short story collection that, according to Farmer, “illuminate[s] the moment the familiar becomes strange, and that split second before everything changes forever.” In this collection, Farmer displays her ability to turn bizarre events and people into metaphors for painful hardships and enlightened hopes.
Many of the stories bring in family members, especially sisters, and the speakers in these stories seem always to compare themselves to these people. The mood throughout the entire book is very melancholic, and the main focuses are either evolving/growing up or remaining stuck in one place. The setting of the stories varies a lot, but there are a lot of mentions of a town and a river, which makes me think of the country and “simpler lives.” Overall, the stories are based on slow occurrences instead of fast action and dialogue, and Farmer uses the same symbols over and over to create a sense of familiarity for her readers and her characters throughout the book.
Some stories, like one with a forest fire, portray how some people can never escape the “flames” of life, and can only sit in an eternity of suffering and confusion. While some stories, such as one about a woman getting a divorce while also being a gymnastic spotter, is one about moving on learning to take oneself seriously in the face of sheepishness. I cannot possibly choose a favorite story, but one I enjoyed and thought about a lot was “Consider the Blind Fish.” The story, at base level, is about a tour group surveying a blind fish in a cave. When looked at more thoroughly though, the story, in my opinion, is comparing the fish to a person who is “blind.” Not physically, but blind in the sense that they don’t pay any mind to the malicious world around them, and simply let life run its course, and let good things happen to them simply by accident.
No matter how peculiar, all these stories are expertly woven with forthright commentaries on struggles many people can relate to. Just as Farmer says, the book does indeed illuminate the strangeness of life and focuses on many different interpretations of change. Her writing style brings everything full circle, with every story filled with lush and poetic words that I had to mull over multiple times because of how candid they were. This small book of stories hit a tender part of my brain that not many books can reach, and I thoroughly enjoyed reading through all of them.