From Publishers Weekly
The third collection from Oprah author Lott (A Song I Knew by Heart; Jewel) comprises uneven stories that explore the frail relationships and difficult emotions that render life surreal: in the eponymous story, an angry wife miraculously moves all of her furniture, including a heavy armoire containing her bewildered husband's things, to one corner of the bedroom. In "Family," a terrible fight between another husband and wife transforms their children into television-watching, complaining, aerobicizing dolls who live in a cooler. "Rose" echoes William Faulkner's "A Rose for Emily" but lacks its predecessor's narrative power, becoming instead a heavy-handed allegory starring an ancient, murderous necrophiliac. Other stories feature mostly unnamed, middle-aged characters in depressing situations, including bankruptcy, adultery, poverty, marital dissolution, and death. Lott's terse reflections on the struggles of average people trying to cope with mundane tragedy long to evoke Raymond Carver; instead, they produce meaningless dialogue, and epiphanies reached in the last line feel similarly forced. An occasional articulate observation about the difference between actual selves and imagined selves isn't enough to overcome cloying imitation or pervasive sentimentality.
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Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
In this disappointingly thin short story collection, Lott resorts to Faulkner-like language and magic realism seemingly out of sheer desperation, for these extravagant touches cannot mask the fact that most of these stories lack substance. In "Family," a husband and wife suddenly stop in midargument when they realize their son and daughter are missing. They find their children in an ice cooler, where they have morphed into miniaturized adults; both are angry with their parents for intruding. In the highlight of the collection, "The Train, the Lake, the Bridge," two boys and their fathers are horrified to discover a train that has fallen into a half-frozen lake after the trestle collapsed during a heavy blizzard. Upon venturing onto the ice, the boys witness the frozen train occupants bobbing just beneath the surface. However, one story does not a collection make; other efforts are torpedoed by too obvious symbolism and ephemeral plots. Lott's reputation is still running high off the momentum generated by his Oprah-anointed Jewel (1991), which may prompt requests for his latest effort. But buy sparingly. Joanne Wilkinson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

