Residents of a Rust Belt town dream, scheme, get high, get sober, and start over in Gardner’s gritty collection of linked short stories.
“I asked my characters what they wanted and they answered: Oxycontin, Xanax, blunts, and booze.” So begins the first, titular story in Gardner’s collection; its unnamed narrator, an aspiring writer, hopes to pen a novel about the opioid epidemic, with his own addiction thinly veiled as “immersive research.” Gardner’s characters, too, desire drugs, but they want more than that: escape, a new direction, to make peace with the past and build anew. They pursue these similar ends in myriad ways. For example, the cast of “Delinquents” pins their hopes for deliverance on a homemade rocket ship; the protagonist of “Lifers, Locals, and Hangers-on,” suffocated by the monotony of her life, sees in a visiting cowboy the possibility of far-off adventure. In “Digging,” a character seeks comfort in a relationship with a younger man who’s troubled by self-loathing and fixated on a violent episode in local history. The collection’s longest story, a novella titled “Captain Failure,” focuses on a recurring character named Dunk, unveiling his traumatic past as an ex-cult member. He seeks a peace that eludes him, even in sobriety, until he’s hired to consult on a movie about the cult, forcing him to confront his childhood. It’s notable that few of Gardner’s characters ever actually leave their town of Westinghouse, Ohio; instead, they seek relief in each other, themselves, intoxication, or sobriety. The author masterfully switches up the pace with writing that’s alternately blunt, frenzied, and meditative to evoke the grinding conditions of his characters’ lives, the elasticity of time in Westinghouse, and the unique manifestations of shared desperation for something more. Gardner seems uninterested in a traditional sort of redemption for his characters, instead forcing readers to meet them on their terms. The result is a propulsive and startlingly moving collection.
Hard but hopeful tales of middle America, addiction, and the human condition.