This is why we can't have nice things

Naomi Wood

Book - 2024

"A woman has an unexpected outburst at a corporate therapy session for working mothers. A couple find some long-overdue time to rekindle their relationship and make an ill-advised home movie. A pregnant film director plots revenge on the actress who betrayed her. An ex-wife deliberately causes conflict at her ex-husband's wedding. ...[This short story collection] illuminates the lives of malicious, subversive, and untamed women. Exploring failed sisterhood, dubious parenting, and the dark side of modern love, this powerful and funny collection exposes how society wants women to behave, and shows whathappens when they refuse"--

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Subjects
Genres
Short stories
Published
Boston : Mariner Books [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Naomi Wood (author)
Edition
First US edition
Item Description
Originally published as This Is Why We Can't Have Nice Things in Great Britain in 2024 by Phoenix Books.
Physical Description
245 pages ; 23 cm
ISBN
9780063399723
  • Contents
  • Lesley, in therapy
  • Comorbidities
  • Dracula at the movies
  • A/A/A/A/
  • Peek-a-boo
  • Wedding day
  • Hurt feelings
  • Flatten the curve
  • Dino moms
  • Acknowledgments.
Review by Booklist Review

Wood's (Mrs. Hemingway, 2014) first story collection contains the BBC National Short Story Award--winning "Comorbidities," in which a woman navigates having more sex with her husband while raising (worrying over) two small kids amidst climate catastrophe. "This is why I'm not horny! I wanted to say, the world on fire is not arousing!" Another of Wood's protagonists, happily separated, she thought, from her kids' father, is told by her best friend, "We all want to leave. No one wants to stay. But they're the grand love affair, in the end. The kids. No one else." The book's sole story not based in reality, "Dino Moms" concerns a "scripted-reality TV show" in which veterinarian moms live on a ranch with dinosaurs and sometimes get eaten by them. Wood's perceptive, funny writing and her characters, concerned about loving both their jobs and their children too much even as they worry their kids won't have a world to live in, make for a winning addition to recent, taboo-embracing motherhood fiction like Rachel Yoder's Nightbitch (2021) and Soldier Sailor (2023) by Claire Kilroy.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The characters in this nuanced if slight collection from Wood (The Godless Boys) are loosely connected by themes of motherhood and the tensions brought about by having children. The narrator of "A/A/A/A," separated from her husband, agrees to accompany her friend Marissa to Paris for the day, without telling her husband what she's up to. Her secrecy leads her to ruminate about the limits of a parent's obligations, prompting Marissa to respond, "We all want to leave. No one wants to stay. But they're the grand love affair in the end. The kids." In "Lesley, in Therapy," the title character cuts her maternity leave short while dealing with postpartum depression. Her nanny, an older Jamaican woman, tells Lesley she's "better off at work than wanting to dash the baby's brains out on the kitchen counter." In "Flatten the Curve," set during the Covid-19 pandemic, Deborah navigates lockdown with her family and develops a crush on her neighbor, the father of her daughter's best friend. Hints of consequential drama suffuse most of the stories, and the characters are deliciously complex, but too often the entries end abruptly. Ultimately, this one's a bit underwhelming. Agent: Sarah Fuentes, United Talent Agency. (Nov.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A socially astute collection about the pleasures and perils of motherhood. Triangulating the roles that many women with children play--as mothers, wives, and professionals--these stories smartly ask whether women can successfully pull off all three. In "Comorbidities," winner of the BBC Short Story Prize, the narrator's love for her children comes at the price of her fierce desire for her husband. When they finally do share an intimate moment, she almost cries, contemplating "how much [they] had both lost, the price [they] had paid." In "Lesley, in Therapy," a woman suffering from extreme postpartum depression cuts short her parental leave, only to realize that work isn't the solution--not only because her job can't lift her malaise, but also because of the absence of real structural support for mothers. When Lesley complains about her work load, which is supposed to be lighter after having a baby, the therapist leading her company's Group Therapy for Returning Parents counsels her to "focus on the here and now, and what wecan change." "Weall want to leave," a woman in "A/A/A/A/" tells a friend who has just learned that her husband has left her for another woman. "No onewants to stay. But they're the grand love affair, in the end. The kids." While women bear the burden of family life in many of these stories--and some readers will surely experience PTSD reading "Flatten the Curve," about parenting through the Covid-19 lockdown--they're not saints. What's true horror, wonders the pregnant director in "Dracula at the Movies" as she cruelly manipulates her star into a good performance--being the victim, or the perpetrator? While a few stories get bogged down by elaborate, slightly boring work situations, this is a deft account of the huge toll of trying to have everything. A must-read for working mothers--for whom reading might be a luxury they can't afford. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.