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CITY SWIMMERS & OTHER STORIES by Steve Clark

CITY SWIMMERS & OTHER STORIES

by Steve Clark

Pub Date: Sept. 11th, 2024
ISBN: 9798990416727
Publisher: Black Note Press

Clark offers a collection of city-based short stories exploring themes of adulthood, marriage, parenthood, and loss.

These 10 vignettes excavate interior musings and relationships between spouses, parents, and children; most of the stories center around marriage. In the title story, a writer and lifelong New Yorker ponders the main character of a story he is working on as he gets his young son ready for school and reminisces about his wife. “For the Love Of Wasabi Peas” is a poignant portrait of a couple that has married three times and divorced twice as they are on the verge of their third divorce. (“When you fall in love, no matter how old you become, how many years pass, a part of you remains that age for each other forever, no matter what.”) In “His Day at the Beach” and “The Reunion,” divorced fathers grapple with the distances between them and their sons. (“I could lose her. But my kids, my boys? I had to lie down. My heart was beating so fast I thought I’d die, and I couldn’t do that and leave them unprotected.”) “The Revenge Fund” is a marked contrast; in this tale, a young woman is the only one of her friends denied entrance to a club. (“The buzzard doesn’t think she can hear him, says out the side of his mouth, ‘Face Control.’ He’s referring to her. It’s her face that’s being controlled. Being excluded, shut out.”) When she gets an unexpected and large inheritance the following week, she takes elaborate and satisfying revenge on the buzzardlike bouncer. In his first collection of short stories, Clark deftly depicts people of varying ages and perspectives. The conversations throughout are sharp and authentic, as are the interior monologues that illuminate the motives and actions of characters. For the most part, the stories take place in New York City and its environs, with witty evocations of its gruff reputation; even “A Last Stroll Through Her Favorite City,” set in Paris, includes this shout-out: “How unlike New York, a woman just smiled at me for no reason.”

An entertaining and thoughtful group of stories.