by Yoon Choi ‧ RELEASE DATE: Aug. 17, 2021
An exceptional debut.
The rare story collection that draws you in so completely that the pages turn themselves.
That’s the happy experience of reading Choi’s debut book of eight luxuriously long stories that chronicle the lives of Korean American families. Tolstoy wrote, “All happy families are alike; each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.” Choi’s families aren’t unusually unhappy, but her characters bear the weight of the small indignities, compromises, and sometimes great sacrifices that families require. In “The Church of Abundant Life,” Soo spends her days behind the counter of the store her husband bought when he immigrated to the United States. A chance encounter with an old acquaintance from South Korea makes her reflect on her somewhat impulsive choice to marry one man and not another—who then married her acquaintance—and the tragedies both couples have borne. “The Art of Losing” (selected for the Best American Short Stories in 2018) captures the tenderness and brutality of long marriages. “Sometimes,” the wife observes, “she felt that patience and kindness could be stretched so far in a marriage as to become their opposites.” Similarly, in “Song and Song,” a sprawling piece about losing a mother and becoming one, the narrator realizes that mothering is an act both of forgiving and being forgiven; though her children haven’t brought her the happiness she expected, “they have taught me all I know about the meaning of life.” Choi’s stories are both closely observed and expansive, a feat of narrative engineering that places her next to Alice Munro. Nearly every one builds to what feels like an epiphany, or a pearl of wisdom, only to rush on for more pages as though to remind us that life does not stand still, that flux is the normal state of things, and loss always lurks on love’s horizon.
An exceptional debut.Pub Date: Aug. 17, 2021
ISBN: 978-0-593-31821-8
Page Count: 304
Publisher: Knopf
Review Posted Online: June 15, 2021
Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2021
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PERSPECTIVES
by Kaveh Akbar ‧ RELEASE DATE: Jan. 23, 2024
Imperfect, yes, but intense, original, and smart.
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National Book Award Finalist
A philosophical discourse inside an addiction narrative, all wrapped up in a quest novel.
Poet Akbar's debut in fiction features Cyrus Shams, a child of the Midwest and of the Middle East. When Cyrus was an infant, his mother, Roya, a passenger on a domestic flight in Iran, was killed by a mistakenly fired U.S. missile. His father, Ali, who after Roya died moved with Cyrus to small-town Indiana and worked at a poultry factory farm, has also died. Cyrus disappeared for a time into alcoholism and drugs. Now on the cusp of 30, newly sober but still feeling stuck in his college town, Cyrus becomes obsessed with making his life matter, and he conceives of a grand poetic project, The Book of Martyrs (at the completion of which, it seems, he may commit suicide). By chance, he discovers online a terminally ill Iranian American artist, Orkideh, who has decided to live out her final days in the Brooklyn Museum, having candid tête-à-têtes with the visitors who line up to see her, and Cyrus—accompanied by Zee, his friend and lover, who's understandably a bit alarmed by all this—embarks on a quest to visit and consult with and learn from her. The novel is talky, ambitious, allusive, deeply meditative, and especially good in its exploration of Cyrus as not being between ethnic or national identities but inescapably, radically both Persian and American. It succeeds so well on its own terms that the novel's occasional flaws—big coincidences, forays into other narrators that sometimes fall flat, dream-narratives, occasional small grandiosities—don't mar the experience in any significant way.
Imperfect, yes, but intense, original, and smart.Pub Date: Jan. 23, 2024
ISBN: 9780593537619
Page Count: 352
Publisher: Knopf
Review Posted Online: Sept. 26, 2023
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 1, 2023
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SEEN & HEARD
PERSPECTIVES
SEEN & HEARD
by Arlene Heyman ‧ RELEASE DATE: July 7, 2020
Like its heroine, intelligent and lusty; full of real joys and sorrows.
The making of a woman scientist over four decades of change in the middle of the 20th century.
“So what do you actually do?” Dr. Lottie Kristin Hart Levinson—aka Dr. Rat Westheimer—is asked at a cocktail party in 1984. “This may sound odd to you,” she replies, “but I study rat salivary glands. They’re more important than people think.” Her subsequent explanation details the role of cunnilingus in rat sex. Neither Lottie nor her creator is squeamish in any way—not about rat sex, or rat dissection, or human sex, all described with brio in these pages. As Lottie tells her football-star high school boyfriend, who becomes her first husband, “I want to know everything about my body, about your body, I want to try everything there is in the world, I want to try it all with you.” Actually, she saves some for her intrepid second husband 30-odd years later; there hasn’t been a menstruation sex scene like this since Scott Spencer’s Endless Love. Heyman’s debut novel after a successful story collection, Scary Old Sex (2016), also brings to mind Marge Piercy’s domestic dramas of the 1980s, which told the stories of women whose consciousness and lives were changed by the feminist movement and the new options it created in American life. From Lottie’s childhood in Michigan in the early 1940s through her struggles in the Vietnam War era to her maturity as a scientist, mother, and stepmother in the mid-1980s, her curiosity and intellect drive her as strongly as her hormones. It takes decades to tunnel her way through the walls sexism builds around her potential and find her way to the career in science she was made for. Caring as much about her work as she does about domestic life is a constant issue in Lottie’s adulthood; tragic consequences threaten and are not always averted.
Like its heroine, intelligent and lusty; full of real joys and sorrows.Pub Date: July 7, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-63557-471-5
Page Count: 288
Publisher: Bloomsbury
Review Posted Online: May 3, 2020
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2020
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