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Jess Walter's 2013 short story collection, We Live in Water, was published by Harper Perennial. I'm going to single out two stories from this collection:
I suppose I've hated Portland since I took a pop there. It was a shame, too, because it was the perfect Portland scam. A guy in my building was a volunteer recruiter for Greenpeace, and one day when he left his car unlocked I stole his pamphlets and sign-up logs. I couldn't use that shit in Seattle so I drove to Union Station in Portland, picked out two lost kids who looked like they could be college students, and put them out downtown.
--From "Helpless Little Things," pp. 69-81 (first published in Playboy, Vol. 56, No. 2, February 2009).
Wade's lawyers said they could get him transferred back to Seattle for community service, but he didn't want some old client seeing him cleaning pigeon shit in Pioneer Square. His kids wanted nothing to do with him. And until the divorce was finalized, he didn't even know which house to go to.
No, he said, he'd just do his community service in Spokane.
--From "The Wolf and the Wild," pp. 133-146 (first published in McSweeney's, Issue 41).
These two stories stood out to me, but the collection is really strong as a whole. My other favorites were "Don't Eat Cat" (pp. 85-105), "Wheelbarrow Kings" (pp. 147-161), and the third of a set of three linked stories, "The Brakes" (127-131). The last piece here, which appeared in The Best of McSweeney's and inspired me to read more of Jess Walter's work, was "Statistical Abstract for My Hometown, Spokane, Washington" (163-177).
Wednesday, February 22, 2017
We Live in Water by Jess Walter
Labels:
Harper Perennial,
HarperCollins,
Jess Walter,
McSweeney's,
Playboy
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