Who
Reads Short Shorts? Full
libraries in one little package BY
SUZI STEFFEN
Once upon a time, I took a break for Thanksgiving
and cleaned up my messy room. Turned out I had more than 300 books
lying around, needing homes. And because I lived in the home of
the Iowa Writers' Workshop and frequented Prairie Lights Books,
many of those books were short story collections.
Recently, I performed some pre-Thanksgiving cleaning
and started to pile books left, right and center for re-sorting
into appropriate bookshelves. More plays, more literary nonfiction,
more young adult books … but not too many short story collections.
And that's a shame, even though I already have hundreds
of short stories on my shelves. For one thing, it's an axiom among
publishers that people don't buy short stories, and I like to counter
that with my spending money. For another, short stories offer a
wide range of experience in compact form.
The best short story I've ever read, by Lorrie Moore,
comes from her 1998 The Birds of America. I reread "People
Like That Are the Only People Here" so often some sentences are
practically engraved on my brain: "Baby and Chemo, she thinks: they
should never even appear in the same sentence together, let alone
the same life," for example, or "Overheard, or recorded, all marital
conversations must sound as if someone must be joking, though usually
no one is."
Moore's mordant humor and her mocking self-awareness,
which leave room for tender and surprising flashes, charm tears
and smiles out of me every time. Do yourself a favor and order Birds
from, say, Books Without Borders. Or, for more reading pleasure
(including Alice Munro's depiction of the price of longing, "The
Children Stay," and a barely known gem called "Brokeback Mountain"
by Annie Proulx), find "People Like That," the first-place winner,
in 1998's Prize Stories: The O. Henry Awards.
Prize anthologies — my usual suspects include
Best American Short Stories and the O. Henry Awards —
provide dangerously seductive reading. "Oh, I can just read one
story while I'm cooking dinner," I might think, or perhaps, "I'll
check and see which story took second place in 2003 while I pack
for the trip to the Midwest." Yeah, good plan! Not.
But neither is opening books by a single author.
I remember being charmed by Isaac Asimov's terrible short story
puns when I was 12 or so. Now I'm more likely to return to Junot
Diaz's intense and vulnerable debut collection, Drown, or
Ethan Canin's rich and complex The Palace Thief. If I want
tough Scots immigrants and their emotionally stunted offspring,
I'll pick up one of Alice Munro's collections; to balance Scots
with Irish, I'll read Andrea Barrett's 1996 National Book Award-winning
Ship Fever. And if I want a new book about our state, I'll
pick up my copy of Eugene-born Benjamin Percy's Refresh, Refresh.
Refresh, Refresh is clearly a young writer's
collection; some stories could have been revised after aging. Yet
Percy (whose first collection, The Language of Elk, was published
in 2006) captures sides of the Pacific Northwest that most people
don't know — the brutal depression of rural poverty, the dangers
of the mysterious forest and the people who grow up within its powerful
grip, the allure of guns and fighting and fury in a landscape that
demands, and defeats, big gestures. Our current wars with their
hot charge of death and despair blow through Tumalo's lava-based
country in the prize-winning title story, and David Brin's The
Postman shadows every step of the apocalyptic "Meltdown." Bittersweet
revenge works, for a while, for the working class guys in "The Killing"
and "Somebody Is Going to Have to Pay for All This." Wisely, Percy
saves the strong "When the Bear Came" for last, a hardscrabble reward
for a book about the hardscrabble lives of people who aren't merely
vacationing in the demanding terrain of Central Oregon.
"There is no frigate like a book / to take us lands
away," wrote Emily Dickinson. In Percy's case, there is no dirt
bike like this collection to take us into the depths of the high
plateau.
BOOK NOTES:
Kenny Moore signs Bowerman and the Men of Oregon, 7 pm
11/28, Barnes & Noble. Deborah Madison discusses Vegetarian
Suppers from Deborah Madison's Kitchen, 7:30 pm 11/28, Powell's
on Burnside, Portland. Ehud Havazelet and Dorianne Laux
read, 8 pm 11/29, Knight Library, UO. Shannon Wheeler discusses
the latest Too Much Coffee Man collection, Screw Heaven, When
I Die I'm Going to Mars, 7:30 pm 11/29, Powell's on Hawthorne,
Portland. Contributors to It's So You read, 7:30 pm,
12/4, Powell's on Burnside, Portland.