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HOW STRANGE A SEASON by Megan Mayhew Bergman Kirkus Star

HOW STRANGE A SEASON

by Megan Mayhew Bergman

Pub Date: March 29th, 2022
ISBN: 978-1-4767-1310-6
Publisher: Scribner

A collection of quietly wrenching stories that plumb the minds of women stuck at life’s fragile crossroads.

In her third short story collection, Bergman masterfully probes the lives of strange, stubborn women and girls, from dissatisfied wives to suspicious, watchful children. Often finding themselves in the wake of tragedy or enormous life change—the unceremonious end of a marriage; a parent’s death; the sudden, unwanted inheritance of a family estate—these characters work to navigate the existential anxieties of lives imbued by silent, amorphous sorrow. In "Workhorse," a woman newly separated from her husband (“We’d planned to divorce, but neither of us liked paperwork”) contends with the whims of her recently widowed retired-businessman father; when a restlessness leads him to move to his native Italy and adopt a wounded mule, both parent and child must acknowledge the losses they’ve endured—namely, of someone to care for. The theme of parental mortality continues in "The Heirloom," which finds 29-year-old Regan the unenthusiastic inheritor of her mother’s sustainability ranch; after she repurposes it into a site for city men to drive bulldozers and crush cars, she battles her own “pent-up rage to split a metal machine wide open,” reeling from her mother’s death and the unpredictability of loss. In "Wife Days," the semi-unhappily married Farrah swims endless laps, courts male attention, and engages in detached, animalistic sex with her husband, all while warding against the “craziness” that came, as her mother warned, “when the currency of beauty faded.” The novella-length "Indigo Run"—set at Stillwood, a pain-riddled Southern estate that’s housed generations of the old Glass family—probes the burdens its women carry from one generation to the next: loss, motherhood, ancestral burdens. Bergman’s stories are so atmospherically and emotionally rich that they serve as portals into distinct interior worlds, often concluding on a quiet, destabilizing note that calls into question the narrative’s apparent straightforwardness. As a whole (and though "Indigo Run" is unevenly paced), this collection is distinct and vivid, each story burrowing inside the reader’s brain to leave an indelible mark.

As singular as it is atmospheric.