McNeely’s collection abounds with flawed relationships and fraught situations.
There’s a moment early in “Snow, Houston, 1974,” the first story in the book, in which Buddy, a young child, watches his father put out a fire in their home. His father makes an offhand joke to him that his mother doesn’t understand: “She hadn’t caught the joke in his father’s voice,” McNeely writes, and it leads to heightened tension between mother and father. The subtle complexities of that encounter act as a summary of what’s to come next: stories that follow Buddy as he grows up and his parents divorce as well as a few that trace the life of Turner, a would-be writer who develops a drinking problem at a young age. In returning to these characters several times and showing them from different angles, McNeely achieves an often heartbreaking level of detail. Later, in "No One's Trash," Buddy’s mother, Margot, gets her turn in the spotlight. Her frustrations over her marriage—and the fact that her pregnancy derailed her medical career—make for a slow-burning thread throughout the book, and it also illustrates McNeely’s commitment not to reduce any of his characters to types. The Turner we encounter first, given to comments like “I would be redeemed, I thought, by poetry and love,” eventually grows into a terrible, abusive boyfriend—though even that isn’t the end of his story. At one point, Buddy's cousin tells him, “We don’t play those kind of games anymore.” This book abounds with moments like those, in which characters’ youthful illusions fall away even though they’d seemed all too comfortable.
An emotionally taut and often haunting collection.