Head
Most of the stories in this collection, which won the 1999 Mary McCarthy Prize in Short Fiction, have appeared separately in such wellknown journals as Esquire, Fiction, and StoryQuarterly. Together, they form something of a story cycle, focusing on a farm-boy's childhood and young adulthood in rural Florida and later New York City. Particularly evident here are a clipped, figurative language and the narrator's emotional surges of fear and a desire for intimate knowledge. In "Wet," he and his brother have been taken by their overbearing stepfather, Lloyd, to lay fence around a swamp in the midst of a coming thunderstorm, their rising fear straining to assert itself: "Okay now, Lloyd, it is lightening us." In "Where the Dark Ended," after being too timid to pursue a woman who "went in me, way up inside of my mind," he is, while drugged up, suddenly drawn by the Statue of Liberty. "I had to go up inside her. It was clear to me. I had to climb up inside that idea," which is a sequence that ultimately compels him to something more "real." - James O'Laughlin (Booklist)
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