Minimalist without being enigmatic, talented newcomer Meloy packs a lot into a small space: 15 spare, memorable stories, set mostly in the contemporary rural West.
In the understated “Tome,” a young woman lawyer tells of being held hostage by a distraught client and reveals her own complicity with the system that has betrayed him. The ambiguities of justice and ethical behavior come up in other stories also, as with the unintended consequences in “A Stakes Horse” after a woman insists that her horse run an honest race; or when a diplomat in Saudi Arabia, in “Last of the White Slaves,” seems bound forever to the man to whom he did a terrible wrong; or when a husband’s attempts to save a foal are juxtaposed with his wife’s work on behalf of a criminal client seeking returned custody of her little girl (“Kite Whistler Aquamarine”). Perhaps typical of Meloy’s subtlety, the wife is allergic to horses, though the foal that’s being nursed creates not so much an open conflict between the couple as a symbolic complication and specific realistic detail in one. Meloy may be at her best when writing about her native Montana, portraying the seamless blending of lifestyles in the gradual mingling of newcomers and natives. Her characters do all sorts of work, from lawyering to underwater welding to ranching, and she summons them up convincingly with simple strokes. A woman’s perspective comes out in “Ranch Girl” (“If you’re white, and you’re not rich or poor but somewhere in the middle, it’s hard to have worse luck than to be born a girl on a ranch”) and, again, in “Tome,” when the narrator’s advice to her client is dismissed until she drives him hours away to see a male attorney who says the same thing and is believed—making her think that being a man “would be so restful.”
Impressive debut by a young author previously published in the New Yorker and the Paris Review.