Brawler

The nine short stories in Brawler, Lauren Groff's exceptional eighth book, profile women in states of desperation and probe legacies of loss and violence.

Most of the stories employ third-person narration and originally appeared in the New Yorker. Often, inherited trauma binds mothers and daughters. The title character is high school swimmer Sara, who shoplifts and fights in frustration at her mother's incurable illness. In "Under the Wave," set after a natural disaster, a woman adopts an orphan as a replacement for her dead child--despite their racial differences. The title of "The Wind" symbolizes women's fear and rage after an attempted escape from an abusive patriarch. Accidental harm and imagery of the Madonna and Child link the three mother-daughter pairs in "Annunciation."

Themes of midlife reinvention and latent queerness (cf. Matrix) recur. Bisexuality is a secret between a dying woman and her friend in "Birdie." In "Between the Shadow and the Soul," a woman finds new hobbies following early retirement. Although she flirts with her female gardening teacher, she realizes her desire is not to leave her husband but to "brush up against the dazzling future again."

"Such Small Islands" is a startling Jamesian fable; "To Sunland" a 1950s Southern gothic black comedy that would do Flannery O'Connor proud; and the masterful "What's the Time, Mr. Wolf?" a suspenseful, novella-length examination of privilege and obsession.

The prose is stellar and the endings breathtaking. Groff (The Vaster Wilds) is a first-rate novelist, but her short stories are truly peerless. --Rebecca Foster, freelance reviewer, proofreader, and blogger at Bookish Beck

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