A volume of short stories gathers grim and touching moments of New England life.
Longtime New England writer Atkinson returns to fiction (following his 2015 history book, Massacre on the Merrimack) with a collection of tales set on both sides of the Massachusetts–New Hampshire border. The seven stories move back and forth across the Merrimack River and cover a variety of time periods, spanning the late 20th century to the present day. While many of the protagonists are blue collar, barely getting by or just breaking even, a few have made it to more stable circumstances only to discover that there will always be struggles, though they may take different forms. The title story, which opens the book, is one of the bleakest, a day spent with a man whose marriage, house, finances, and work are all in tatters, though a successful hunt brings him a small respite. “Bergeron Framing & Remodeling” is a twisted but moving family tale in which deep dysfunctions overlay the fundamental love between a father and his sons. “Hi-Pine Acres” is the evocative story of a widowed farmer with a layabout son who struggles with the decision to sell off land that has been in her family for more than a century. In “Java Man,” high school nicknames and relationships follow the characters into adulthood. The volume concludes with “Hoot,” in which a struggling singer/songwriter returns to her hometown, hoping that performing at a local bar will throw her career the lifeline it needs.
Life is precarious for almost everyone in these tales, even Thom McNulty of “Ellie’s Diamonds,” whose real estate ambitions offer him the highest earning potential of any of the characters, though he is also trapped in a cycle of debt. Atkinson is skilled at depicting small details that reveal much about his players—for instance, when Goody, the protagonist of “The Tree Stand,” brings down a deer, he quickly calculates how much the meat will allow him to shave off his upcoming grocery bills. One character has her “annual glass of wine” while doing her taxes; a neighborhood bar is replaced by a CVS. There are some delightful turns of phrase (one man has “two Kennedys’ worth of shiny brown hair”) and wry asides that succeed in being quietly funny but not excessively arch. Many of the stories are dominated by men who spend much of their time in predominantly male social and professional settings, but in “Hi-Pine Acres” and “Hoot,” Atkinson shows that he can also write fully developed female protagonists. While all the tales have their strengths, the book really hits its stride with “Java Man,” the first one written in the first person, which allows the author to explore his character’s view of the world from the inside, and he does so effectively. Characters, rather than the plots, drive most of the narratives, but Atkinson’s solid authorial voice and engaging writing style bring an intensity that is likely to win over many readers who would otherwise prefer their fiction with a bit more action.
A thoughtful and well-written collection with a strong sense of place and identity.