Short fiction featuring Black and Latine characters trying to figure out their roles within their families, their love lives, and their communities.
In the bite-sized title story of McCauley’s collection, the narrator, Andra, moves to South Florida, where her new co-workers want to know where she’s from. “No, I mean…really?” they say. Andra’s father is Black, her mother Puerto Rican. She’s visibly othered, but grief has also estranged her, as she’s recently lost her mother. When Andra runs into a dark-skinned Latina at a panadería who speaks Spanish to her, she freezes, thinking of her mother, “Body-full with misted ancestors, yearning for old ghosts.” McCauley, who is also Afro-Latina, chronicles such yearnings in each story, interested in those spaces where differing forces collide internally and externally. Sometimes those forces are based in identity, as in the stunning opening story, “Torsion,” in which the narrator, Claudia (another young Afro-Latina) weighs loyalty to her mother against her desire to move into a self-determined future after her mother asks her to help illegally seize her young disabled brother from the foster parent he’s living with. Almost always, those forces have a moral dimension, as well, as in “Good Guys,” in which Alejandro, a college student at Miami Dade College, seeks to convince the audience, and himself, that he’s better than the class villain, Vick, who comes on to a young woman with a very good reason for not being interested in dating. The stories hang together in surprising ways, often linked across time—McCauley excels at historical fiction as well as contemporary. Individually, they are each admiringly gutsy and tender, with flashes of poetry. No reader will be surprised to learn that McCauley’s debut—Scar On / Scar Off (2017)—blended prose and poems.
What can’t McCauley do? A writer to watch.