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BRAWLER by Lauren Groff Kirkus Star

BRAWLER

by Lauren Groff

Pub Date: Feb. 24th, 2026
ISBN: 9780593418420
Publisher: Riverhead

Nine stories of guile and instinct punch up the human predicament.

It’s no surprise that a book called Brawler should provoke, ambush, and, yes, gut-punch its readers. Those familiar with Groff’s supple fiction will expect this, combined with startling, pinpoint sentences: “Human decency could still overcome hunger, then.” These nine stories follow her earlier collections, Delicate Edible Birds (2009) and Florida (2018); the stories in Florida, named after her adopted home state, crackle with the urgency of precarious lives, and won the Story Prize. This latest is more geographically diffuse but still aflame with combustible characters in harrowing corners. The first story, “The Wind,” has a prosaic title and a haunting, generational imprint as three small children and their mother use the yellow school bus as cover to try to escape domestic violence. The perpetrator, their father, is a cop; their allies work with their mother at the local hospital. In 18 pages, the title lifts into stunning poignancy and leaves the reader breathless. The final story, “Annunciation,” is almost twice as long and, like “The Wind,” told in the first person. It begins when its young protagonist’s family skips her college graduation and sends instead “a dozen carnations dyed blue and a gift certificate to a clothing store for middle-aged women.” This glint of humor serves its purpose in a tale marked by a surprise ending and a capacious eye for the improvisations of young women. The mothers in this book are often absent, drunk, emotionally remote, or ridiculous, but never villains. Instead, Groff attaches her ethical acuity to their children. She appends an author’s note, providing a kernel of motive for each of her installments. “Brawler,” about an unruly teen diver with a dying mother, exists in the wake of her own history, Groff says: “I became a writer because I was a swimmer.” In the coiling dread and frank feminism of her work, this incandescent author makes clear with her newest fiction why she won the 2022 Joyce Carol Oates Prize.

This audacious collection surprises readers with the vivid lives few of us notice.