We could've been happy here Stories

Keith Lesmeister

Book - 2017

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FICTION/Lesmeister, Keith
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Subjects
Genres
Short stories
Published
[Des Plaines, Illinois] : MG Press [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Keith Lesmeister (author)
Physical Description
194 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781944850050
  • Nothing prettier than this
  • Today you're calling me Lou
  • Lie here next to me
  • Between the fireflies
  • A basketball story
  • Imaginary enemies
  • Burrowing animals
  • Company & companionship
  • Blood trail
  • A real future
  • East of Ely
  • We could've been happy here.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A debut story collection about hard-luck denizens of rural and exurban Iowa.The heartland, as captured in Lesmeister's debut, is a downcast place, replete with meth shacks, mortality, and regret. The narrator of "Burrowing Animals" is a recovering addict who's desperate to prove he's worthy of seeing his children again; in "Lie Here Next to Me," a young woman tries to protect her dying mother from her grandmother's interventions; in "A Real Future," one of the few black residents of a rural county endures a series of headaches and humiliations from everyone from DMV workers to people judging his marriage to a white woman. Lesmeister's vision of Iowa isn't exclusively somber, though. He can bring wit and lightness to these dirty-realist tales, as in "Today You're Calling Me Lou," in which the narrator ferries his foulmouthed, no-nonsense grandmother to a garage sale. ("She laughs and it sounds like motor oil gurgling around her lungs.") He can also craft tender characterizations, as in "Between the Fireflies," in which two fifth-graders are charged with shooting rabbits approaching a neighborhood garden, a task lightly in parallel to the girl's father's deployment in the Middle East. And like any good short story writer, he can deliver an eye-catching opening ("Elbow and I ducked out of our nephew's birthday party and drove to Walmart to check on ammo prices"), though a broader canvas might improve some of these stories, which sometimes close on notes of pat ambiguity. But for a first-timer, Lesmeister has developed an admirably concise style and a knack for capturing people during difficult coming-of-age moments or dispiriting processes of decline. Like the amateur cowherds in the title story, they're recognizing that life is often disorderly, with help hard to come by. A gritty, emotionally sensitive clutch of stories. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.