Sixteen stories illuminate the wonder of human connection in Heefner’s collection.
To read this debut collection is to confront the messy, fragile, joyful business of being alive. “Everyone is their most interesting while they’re becoming their best, not after,” says the eponymous character in “What Crissy Calls Becoming,” a wildly unpredictable story about a man who’s unlucky in love, his new acquaintance, and the intense, more-than-friends/less-than-lovers relationship they develop. It is this “becoming” that unites the characters in these stories, a broad cast that hails from all over the map: They are from South Dakota and Oregon, Idaho and Kentucky; they are lawyers and store clerks, waitresses and car salesmen; they are children caring for their aging parents and divorced people looking to find love again, criminals on the run and spouses madly in love after years of marriage. All of them are searching for paths to their true and better selves. When an armed man threatens a cashier in “From Hibernation,” Olaf can’t help but intervene to protect his colleague—a heroic act that earns the attention of a local sheriff and threatens to expose Olaf’s murky past. A recovering alcoholic in “Nosy SOB” becomes obsessed with the woman whose life he may have saved in a traffic accident, looking for ways to get in touch with her. “I Want To See Your Hand” follows Pam as she attempts to make amends with the woman her father unintentionally crippled years earlier. And in the title story, a tragedy at the Adult Sunday School sparks a man’s heartbreaking journey to come to terms with his father’s suicide. While the plots are sometimes overly intricate and hard to grasp, these stories reward a second read. The author writes with an impeccable eye for detail and endless reserves of warmth and humor—his sentences deftly capture the mundane and the sublime.
A lighthearted yet profound assemblage; every story here is a little miracle.