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MONDO DESPERADO

A disappointment: McCabe's voice is a treasure, but it cannot turn water into beer.

A collection of vaguely linked stories, set in the fictional Irish town of Barntrosna and putatively authored by one Phildy Hackball - who is, in fact, none other than Irish novelist McCabe (Breakfast on Pluto, 1998, etc.).

The tremendous success of McCabe's dark novel The Butcher Boy, and the even greater success of Neil Jordan's bleakly riotous film of it, have suddenly brought McCabe a much larger audience abroad than he now enjoys at home (although his popularity has swelled there, too).  Consequently, the market for his work has increased to such a degree that sales of just about anything with his name on it are pretty well assured.  This may explain how these rather slight stories - which give every impression of being either fragments or sketches of larger works left stillborn - found their way into print, for there is nothing very memorable or striking in any of them, or in the collection as a whole.  There is McCabe's distinctive voice, to be sure - simultaneously quaint and outrageous, capable of offending the very people it most entertains - and this is no small thing.  The obsessed bishop of "I Ordained the Devil" (who comes to the conclusion, in the most macabre Jamesian style, that he did precisely that), the demented jealous husband of "Hot Nights at the Go-Go Lounge" (who's so convinced that his wife is unfaithful to him that he loses his reason in an Othellian fit of jealousy), and the epicene, pious prig of "the Bursted Priest" (who drives his young classmates so mad with his piety that they enact upon him a vengeance worthy of the Spanish Inquisition) - all of these (and quite a few others) are true McCabian types who lack the benefit of a real McCabian plot.  Like bastard children, they have their father's eyes but lack his fortunes, and seem quite forlorn and homeless in the end.

A disappointment:  McCabe's voice is a treasure, but it cannot turn water into beer.

Pub Date: March 1, 2000

ISBN: 0-06-019461-8

Page Count: 240

Publisher: HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 2000

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VERGE

Gutsy stories from one of our most fearless writers.

Characters from the fringes of society grapple with desire and fury in this collection of short stories.

Early on in “The Pull,” a story about a young swimmer from a war-torn country, the narrator describes her childhood as the “kind of story that makes your chest grow tight as you listen.” The stories here are exactly that kind: insistently visceral, pushing into, and past, the reader’s comfort zone. Many of the stories center erotic experiences. In “The Garden of Earthly Delights,” Bosch works in a modern-day fish processing plant, and he finds boundless pleasure in the arms of a young male co-worker. In “Cusp,” a teenage girl smuggles drugs into a local prison and shares her body with the prisoners as a way of being closer to her incarcerated brother. But if these stories teach us about lust, they also flip to the other side of that same coin: These are narratives full of deep rage. Some of this rage takes place inside of intimate relationships, as in “A Woman Signifying,” in which the protagonist deliberately burns her face against a radiator to create a “symbol” of her anger at her lover. Sometimes this rage is social, as in “Drive Through,” about an encounter with a panhandler at a McDonald’s drive-thru. Yuknavitch (The Misfit’s Manifesto, 2017, etc.) keeps readers’ heads pressed against what is hardest to see, and this doesn’t always land. Some of the rage can feel self-righteous; some of the desire pushes deep into taboo and veers toward unpalatable. But where there are risks, there are rewards, and these howls from the throats of women, queer characters, the impoverished, and the addicted remind us of the beauty and pain of our shared humanity.

Gutsy stories from one of our most fearless writers.

Pub Date: Feb. 4, 2020

ISBN: 978-0-525-53487-7

Page Count: 208

Publisher: Riverhead

Review Posted Online: Oct. 27, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 15, 2019

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THE BOOK OF UNKNOWN AMERICANS

A smartly observed tale of immigrant life that cannily balances its optimistic tone with straight talk.

A family from Mexico settles in Delaware and strives to repair emotional and physical wounds in Henríquez’s dramatic page-turner.

The author’s third book of fiction (Come Together, Fall Apart, 2006; The World in Half, 2009) opens with the arrival of Arturo and Alma Rivera, who have brought their teenage daughter, Maribel, to the U.S. in the hope of helping her recover from a head injury she sustained in a fall. Their neighbors Rafael and Celia Toro came from Panama years earlier, and their teenage son, Mayor, takes quickly to Maribel. The pair’s relationship is prone to gossip and misinterpretation: People think Maribel is dumber than she is and that Mayor is more predatory than he is. In this way, Henríquez suggests, they represent the immigrant experience in miniature. The novel alternates narrators among members of the Rivera and Toro families, as well as other immigrant neighbors, and their stories stress that their individual experiences can’t be reduced to types or statistics; the shorter interludes have the realist detail, candor and potency of oral history. Life is a grind for both families: Arturo works at a mushroom farm, Rafael is a short-order cook, and Alma strains to understand the particulars of everyday American life (bus schedules, grocery shopping, Maribel’s schooling). But Henríquez emphasizes their positivity in a new country, at least until trouble arrives in the form of a prejudiced local boy. That plot complication shades toward melodrama, giving the closing pages a rush but diminishing what Henríquez is best at: capturing the way immigrant life is often an accrual of small victories in the face of a thousand cuts and how ad hoc support systems form to help new arrivals get by.

A smartly observed tale of immigrant life that cannily balances its optimistic tone with straight talk.

Pub Date: June 3, 2014

ISBN: 978-0-385-35084-6

Page Count: 304

Publisher: Knopf

Review Posted Online: April 16, 2014

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2014

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