Burke's stories frequently set up situations for good to conquer evil, for the disadvantaged to prove themselves more alive than the advantaged, for the wronged to take revenge—there's an old-fashioned Southern liberalism to them that seems morally worthy but artistically hollow. Here, the title story, "Uncle Sidney and the Mexicans" and "Taking A Second Look" all promote a loser into a winner, with a heavy anchor of moralism weighing them down and making them predictable. Burke writes well and evocatively of Louisiana, especially that of decades back; and one story, "Losses"—a WW II Louisiana parochial school, a Catholic boy's introduction to the ambiquity of ethics—is especially satisfying (until its obvious conclusion). A Civil War story, "When It's Decoration Day," has a crammed specificity that almost gives it the ballast of a novella. But on the whole, Burke, who has mostly published novels heretofore, seems message-heavy and schematic at shorter length.