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UNBROKEN by J.S. Rosen Kirkus Star

UNBROKEN

A Collection of Stories

by J.S. Rosen

Pub Date: Dec. 19th, 2021
ISBN: 979-8-7871-3818-4
Publisher: Self

A debut collection of six short stories explores the power of family bonds.

“I hope to highlight some of the many ways in which family can shape us, or even break us,” notes Rosen in her foreword to this brief but memorable compilation. It opens with the title story, in which Maggie Duschene watches a game at Chicago’s Wrigley Field with her uninterested fiance, Cory, and reflects on how baseball was the glue that kept her family together when she was young; a conversation with a neighboring fan leads to a painful revelation. In “The New Ingredient,” a divorced father who hasn’t seen his daughter, Violet, in almost three months is surprised when the 8-year-old brings along an unexpected and unconventional friend on a visit, while in “For What It’s Worth,” a visit to the grave of the narrator’s centenarian grandmother, Ruth, prompts an exploration of their Jewish Russian roots. The collection closes with “ ‘Don’t look too good or talk too wise,’ ” about a student trying to acclimatize to college life. The strongest story is “Empty Cities”; its opening, in which Thomas, a troubled father, watches the world pass by while sitting on a bench, showcases Rosen’s prose at its most sensitive and attentive: “He had slipped off his right shoe when no one on the platform was looking and began tracing the ground with the ball of his foot. Side to side. Forward and back. It reminded him of when he was a child….” It’s a fine example of how the author slips fluidly between characters’ inner and outer worlds. Overall, Rosen proves to be a versatile writer, and “Partition,” about an office worker who finds sanctuary in a restroom stall, provides a master class in writing in the second person, skillfully and engagingly blurring the line between narrator and reader: “In the midst of a brain-crushing, sanity-shrinking workday you’re always able to come in here, sit, and think for a moment.”

A tenderly observant set of tales.