With Mae West as her ingenious guiding spirit, Erika Krouse introduces us to thirteen young, single, geographically and emotionally nomadic women looking for self-knowledge and trouble. "I like to sleep with other women's husbands," says the narrator of "The Husbands" by way of introduction; unf
Come Up and See Me Sometime: Stories
โ Scribed by Krouse, Erika
- Book ID
- 109114073
- Publisher
- Scribner
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 204 KB
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
From Publishers Weekly
"Cliff, our relationship has no punch line," says one of the protagonists of the 13 stories in this witty, astringent debut collection. "Yet," he replies. Like the sly jab of an elbow, Krouse's wit startles her readers into sympathizing with the characters geographically and emotionally nomadic women and the men they love and despise of her downbeat tales. Heroin addict Cliff meets his girlfriend, in "Drugs and You," when she hits him while driving in Santa Fe. The female protagonist of "Mercy," a battered wife who has escaped from her husband, finds herself sliding into a relationship with her New York landlord, the cook at an unconventional Chinese restaurant. In "Momentum," Irene's live-in boyfriend decides he wants to leave her or maybe not and Irene cries so much her eyes no longer swell up: "she could now cry often and gracefully." In "Impersonator," one of the most powerful stories and one of the few with a hopeful ending, two feisty women who have dated the same excuse for a man eventually come to the logical conclusion that they were meant for each other. In "Too Big to Float," a young woman uses her fear of flying as a way to avoid what could be a meaningful romance with a handsome pilot. Though it sometimes seems as if each character dispenses the same bitter humor, Krouse's dialogue is crisp, with many of the barrage of one-liners hitting their targets dead-on. Each tale is prefaced by a quote from Mae West, regarded by some as the original Liberated Woman, but these stories need no props. Krouse is in the same league as Mary Gaitskill and Lorrie Moore, her fiction wise to the bravado required of Liberated Women through the ages.
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
As the title of Krouse's first book of short stories suggests, Mae West is her muse, and the sex symbol's famously saucy epigrams introduce each of Krouse's 13 tales about young women at loose ends. Like West, Krouse possesses snappy timing, droll pithiness, and deep skepticism about love, marriage, motherhood, and the whole traditional shebang. Her heroines are drifters both in their roving ways and in their inability, or unwillingness, to become emotionally involved. Some have good reasons. In "Mercy," Krouse's protagonist takes her husband's wallet while he beats her, then flees Texas for New York, where she rents a room above a Chinese restaurant and waits to feel human again. One gal routinely sleeps with other women's husbands, and the only way another manages to meet a man is when she hits one with her car. Incoherent relationships, other people's weddings, abortions, drugs, poverty, fear of flying, and loneliness: Krouse astutely ponders them all, balancing pain with mordant wit and a preference, always, for freedom. Donna Seaman
Copyright ยฉ American Library Association. All rights reserved
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Like father, like daughter. That's what businessman Alex Trahern thinks about Isabel Harrison. If the prestigious headhunter thinks she can steal his top employee, just like her father stole his dad's ideas, she's dead wrong. Alex is always a man with a plan, and his plan is to get revenge on John