Publishers Weekly - 02.03.2020

(Axel Boer) #1
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Review_FICTION


brings them to scintillating life. (May)


Amora
Natalia Borges Polesso, trans. from the
Portuguese by Julia Sanches. Amazon Crossing,
$19.95 (234p) ISBN 978-1-5420-0433-6
Polesso’s bittersweet collection (after
Control) explores the highs and lows of life
for a series of Brazilian lesbians. In “My
Cousin’s in Town,” an unnamed narrator
invites her co-workers over for dinner, and
when her girlfriend, Bruna—who was
supposed to be traveling—comes out of
their bathroom wrapped in a towel, the
narrator introduces Bruna as a cousin to
keep her sexual identity a secret. In
“Dreaming,” Raquel, a businesswoman
whose friends find her “shockingly tedious,”
stuns them with a story from her time
living in San Francisco in her 20s, when,
naked and drunk during a house party,
she sneaked into a celebrity’s pool and
hooked up with a “blonde, leggy, tanned”
woman with “surfer’s cheeks.” “Renfield’s
Demons” tells the gut-punching story of
Débora, who comes home unexpectedly
and finds her partner, Moira, entangled
with another woman on the living room
floor. A week later, to combat her depres-
sion, Débora goes to a costume party
where she has sex with a woman dressed
as a vampire, who draws real blood when
she bites. With brevity, abstraction, and
narrative tension, Polesso offers a poignant
look at women alternately broken down
and resilient. Fans of Lucia Berlin will
love these tense and twisty tales. (May)


Vanishing Monuments
John Elizabeth Stintzi. Arsenal Pulp, $17.95
trade paper (304p) ISBN 978-1-55152-801-4
In Stintzi’s ambitious debut novel (after
the poetry collection Junebat) a nonbinary
photographer based in Minneapolis
struggles to break through the barriers of
their past. The photographer, Alani Baum,
navigates their “memory palace” after their
mother’s dementia takes a turn for the


worse and they return to their childhood
home in Winnipeg for the first time in 30
years. The components of the palace guide
the narrative through collaged passages that
examine the space’s fixed points. Chapters
titled “The Living Room” and “The Stairs”
open on scenes narrated in the second
person, bringing the reader into rooms
where walls are “covered in memories.”
Stintzi ties Alani’s troubled history with
their mother to readings of Ovid, descrip-
tions of photographs, and past travels
from the narrator’s life that reach as far as
Hamburg, where Alani worked as a model
for photographer Erwin Egger. Certain
moments stand out vividly—a description
of Alani navigating their nonbinary iden-
tity through the metaphor of a labyrinth
and a Minotaur, the detailed construction

of Erwin’s photographic compositions—
but they don’t all cohere in the long run.
Still, Stintzi’s skill shines through in well-
crafted sentences and narratives. Despite
its weaknesses, Stintzi’s first foray into the
novel form displays a visionary approach
with the refreshing touch of a poet. (May)

The Narcissism of Small Differences
Michael Zadoorian. Akashic, $28.95 (304p)
ISBN 978-1-61775-825-1
Zadoorian (The Leisure Seeker) serves up
a wry, unflinching tale of an underachieving
couple in midlife crisis mode as the
recession grips the industrial Midwest.
Joe and Ana live in Ferndale, Mich., a
mile outside Detroit, where they’ve been
shacked up (but not married) for 15 years.
Joe’s a freelance journalist just getting by,

Danny Adams
Nicolas Amara
Allen Appel
Chris Barsanti
Judy Bates
Taryn Benbow-Pfalzgraf
Vicki Borah Bloom
Mitzi Brunsdale
Charlene Brusso
Lynda Brill Comerford
Jessica Daitch

Dave DeChristopher
John diBello
Bryan Dumas
Stefan Dziemianowicz
Rebecca George
Daphne Grab
Sara Grochowski
Patricia Guy
Don Herron
Jon Jeffryes
Justin Jeffryes

Mary M. Jones
Michael M. Jones
Juliet Kahn
Jasmina Kelemen
Cheryl Klein
Tom Krabacher
Pam Lambert
Diane Langhorst
Cody Lee
Nicholas Litchfield
Heidi MacDonald

Patty MacDonald
Amy Magnus
Clare Mao
Peter McPherson
Sheri Melnick
Elizabeth Morse
Albert Municino
Julie Naughton
Eric Norton
Dionne Obeso
Robert Allen Papinchak

Leonard Picker
Diane Reynolds
Roger Reynolds
Ingrid Roper
Carliann Rittman
Joseph L. Sanders
Antonia Saxon
Martha Schulman
Michael Seidlinger
Kira Sexton
Jeffrey Weaver

Kathy Weeks
Erica Wetter
Rona Wilk
Benjamin Woodard
Eris Young
Maryelizabeth Yturralde

Our Reviewers


★ The Vanishing Half
Brit Bennett. Riverhead, $27 (352p) ISBN 978-0-525-53629-1

B


ennett (The Mothers) explores a Louisiana family’s
navigation of race, from the Jim Crow era through
the 1980s, in this impressive work. The Vignes
twins, Desiree and Stella, were born and raised in
Mallard, La., the slave-born founder of which imagined
a town with “each generation lighter than the one before.”
In the early 1940s, when the twins are little, they witness
their father’s lynching, and as they come of age, they
harbor ambitions to get out. Desiree, the more headstrong
sister, leads Stella to New Orleans when they are 16,
and after a few months, the quiet, studious Stella, who
once dreamt of enrolling in an HBCU, disappears one
night. In 1968, 14 years later, still with no word from Stella, Desiree is back in
Mallard with her eight-year-old daughter, Jude, having left her abusive ex-husband.
When Jude is older, she makes her own escape from Mallard to attend college in
Los Angeles. At a party, Jude glimpses a woman who looks exactly like Desiree—
except she couldn’t be, because this woman is white. Eventually, the Vignes twins
reunite, reckoning with the decisions that have shaped their lives. Effortlessly
switching between the voices of Desiree, Stella, and their daughters, Bennett
renders her characters and their struggles with great compassion, and explores
the complicated state of mind that Stella finds herself in while passing as white.
This prodigious follow-up surpasses Bennett’s formidable debut. (June)
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