Short fiction populated by characters whose various longings remain unfulfilled.
In “By Design,” the second story in Sestanovich’s debut collection, Suzanne, a successful graphic designer and the founder of her own firm, is sued for sexual harassment by a younger male colleague. Suzanne’s life falls to pieces: She pulls the plug on her marriage, leaves her company, throws out all her clothing, and moves into a high-rise, where she keeps her apartment’s shelves bare. Her adult son asks her to design his wedding invitations. They will reflect Suzanne’s aesthetic, she thinks: “elegant….Occasionally a little too austere.” The same could be said of Sestanovich. These stories are restrained, nearly aloof, despite the fact that the characters are constantly and messily butting up against the futility of their desires. In “Old Hope,” the young, aimless narrator decides to suddenly resume correspondence with her former high school English teacher while she and a male friend struggle to understand whether they are attracted to each other. The title story features a narrator who shares a tiny apartment with her guitarist/activist boyfriend, watching his life unravel at the same time her ex is elected to Congress and not being sure where her loyalties lie, if anywhere at all. The closing story, “Separation,” traces the life of Kate and the various separations she endures: first when her young husband dies, then when she works at a nursery school helping toddlers with separation anxiety, then, finally, as the mother of a troubled young woman who leaves home to move across the country. Even in these emotionally wrenching scenarios, Sestanovich remains taciturn, offering the reader images and sentences of delicate beauty but leaving much, perhaps too much, unspoken.
A collection shot through with crystalline moments but that ultimately holds readers at arm’s length.