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Best Worst American

Stories

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Winner of the inaugural Neukom Institute Literary Arts Award

These are the best Americans, the worst Americans. In these stories (these cities, these people) there are labyrinths, rivers, wildernesses. Voices sound slightly different than expected. There's humor, but it's going to hurt.

In "On Paradise," a petshop manager flies with his cat to Las Vegas to meet his long-lost mother and grandmother, only to find that the women look exactly like they did forty years before. In "The Spooky Japanese Girl is There For You," the spooky Japanese girl (a ghost) is there for you, then she is not.

These refreshing and invigorating stories of displacement, exile, and identity, of men who find themselves confused by the presence or absence of extraordinary women, jump up, demand to be read, and send the reader back to the earth changed: reminded from these short stories how big the world is.

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    • Kirkus

      December 1, 2016
      Twenty-four semiexistential short stories that have appeared in the likes of McSweeney's and Selected Shorts from Colombia-born writer Martinez. The author has an interesting way of injecting absurdity into everyday life and humor into the phantasmagorical in this wide-ranging, mostly engaging collection of tall tales. The first story, "Roadblock," tells of a spinster aunt who keeps setting the narrator's things on fire. A few are merely dashed-off entertainments, like the poetic but aimless "Strangers on Vacation: Snapshots" or "Your Significant Other's Kitten Poster." "Machulin in L.A." finds an aspiring filmmaker narrating a strange run-in with the bride at a wedding. It doesn't end well: "That's it. They're married. Bastards." The strange, heavily Russian-accented narrator of "Customer Service at the Karaoke Don Quixote" is later explained in the final story, "Best Worst American." In the meantime, readers can be entertained by events at the most literary karaoke bar ever: "First we start with Don Quixote. But soon we branch to postmodernist stuff, because customers want, and customers is always accurate: They say, Barth! Barthelme! Pynchon! Coover! We say, OK. We say, is good." But there are also occasional moments of grace, like this from the end of one of the autobiographical-sounding stories, "Souvenirs from Ganymede": "These are ancillary mysteries. They are peripheral to the business of living but crucial, because they keep us going. They're part of the mystery train, the threads tying us together, the ghosts of fingerprints: they are at the heart of beauty. They are light falling in certain rooms on certain mornings." Some are just flat-out funny; "The Lead Singer is Distracting Me" finds a Keith Richards-like guitarist pondering a different life. Martinez even makes the frightening funny, as in "The Spooky Japanese Girl is There for You," in which a Ringu-like wraith becomes an almost pedestrian nuisance. An uneven but promising debut collection of short stories, some unique in their execution.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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Languages

  • English

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