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LIKES by Sarah Shun-Lien Bynum Kirkus Star

LIKES

by Sarah Shun-Lien Bynum

Pub Date: Sept. 1st, 2020
ISBN: 978-0-374-19194-8
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux

A collection of stories that find politics gone crazy, girls and women navigating their ways through social media minefields, and identity refracted through celebrity culture.

The title story generated considerable attention when it appeared in the New Yorker in 2017. On one level it's about a father’s attempts to decipher the life of his 12-year-old daughter through her Instagram posts, some of which appear to be suggestive, or maybe that’s just to him. Here's one: “New post: a pair of lips, shining wetly.” Another: “New Instagram post: a peeled-off pair of ballet tights, splayed on the white tiles of a bathroom floor.” Just what is it she’s trying to communicate, and with whom? When he tries to talk with his daughter, she's often silent or, perhaps worse, complains that she has no friends. Beyond the father-daughter relationship, the story, set against a backdrop of a dysfunctional culture whose presidential election defies understanding, captures a more general malaise. So many of the stories here are about trying to understand, failing to connect, and interpreting the signs from a relentless barrage of media. The stories evoke myth (“The Erlking”), fairy tales (“Young Wife’s Tale”), and science fiction (“The Burglar”), with dreamlike reveries that find protagonists not quite clear on what they're experiencing, let alone what it means. Throughout, Bynum combines a firm command of tone (often warm, even when dark) with precise detail. In "Many a Little Makes," the longest story and the collection’s centerpiece, a woman named Mari gets a long text from an old friend and finds it reviving all sorts of memories of girls on the cusp of adolescence, how a few years found them changing so dramatically in different ways, how boys and parents complicated the relationship. Bynum's characters struggle to determine who they are, how they are, and how they were, in a distant time before smartphones and cyber-media.

As clean prose dissects messy lives, these stories combine an empathetic heart with acute understanding.