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WE WANT WHAT WE WANT by Alix Ohlin

WE WANT WHAT WE WANT

Stories

by Alix Ohlin

Pub Date: July 27th, 2021
ISBN: 978-0-525-65463-6
Publisher: Knopf

Stories about people waiting for their lives to change.

The characters in Ohlin’s latest collection seem detached, as if they’re watching their own lives—they’re weary but not unamused. In “Money, Geography, Youth,” a young woman returns to LA after volunteering in Ghana and discovers that her father has gotten engaged to her best friend. “I know, it’s so weird,” her friend says. In “The Brooks Brothers Guru,” a young man joins what may or may not be a cult. He leaves a somewhat cryptic message on his Facebook and then signs off. His cousin goes to look for him, but when she finds him living in a seemingly idyllic old house, discussing literature and philosophy with the other members, she considers staying herself. In “The Point of No Return,” one of the finest stories in this very fine collection, a woman’s life seems to pass her by. “Sometimes she saw her life as a tender thing that was separate from herself,” Ohlin writes, “a tiny animal she had happened upon by chance one day and decided to raise.” Ohlin’s stories have a quiet elegance to them and a restraint, although they’re filled, too, with grief and with loss: In many of the stories, a mother or a daughter has gone away, leaving her family behind without explanation. Some of the stories are told in the first person and some in the third, but, either way, there is a kind of sameness that stretches across the book as a whole. The sameness has less to do with what happens (or doesn’t happen) and more to do with how the characters sound—they all seem to have the same voice. Still, Ohlin handles them with such nuance that, in the end, the book is a pleasure to behold.

A wry and moving collection that supplies no easy, unearned endings.