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Stories No One Hopes Are about Them (2022)

by A. J. Bermudez

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1521,378,203 (5)None
"A rogue assistant orchestrates a spectacular art world con in northern India. A custodian-turned-thief absconds to Antarctica while awaiting her trial. A family's underwater vacation is subverted by a murderous school of fish. In a series of 20 short fictions, Stories No One Hopes Are About Them takes the reader to the ends of the earth, from the ocean floor to the mountains of Himachal Pradesh, from an 18th-century German "house of the dead" to death row at Sing Sing to a party at the local zoo. We're guided by cocktail servers, serial killers, and theme park princesses. Many of these characters--like us--should probably be elsewhere. At once playfully dark and slyly hopeful, Stories No One Hopes Are About Them explores convergences of power, privilege, and place. Characters who are ni de aquí, ni de allá--neither from here nor there--straddle competing worlds, disrupt paradigms, and transition from objects of other people's stories to active subjects and protagonists of their own. Narratives of humanity and environment entwine, with nuanced themes of colonization, queerness, and evolution at the forefront. Big things happen in this collection: wars, revelations, ecological catastrophes, curses, crimes. But it's also a collection of small intimacies: misremembered names, chipped teeth, and private rituals; unexpected alliances and barely touched knees beneath uniform skirts; minutiae of the natural world; incidents of quietly, achingly, and delightfully transgressing the familiar. With delicate wit, a breakneck pace, and a featherweight boxing style of nimble, merciless prose, Stories No One Hopes Are About Them is about the places and personhoods we inhabit, including the places and people we probably shouldn't be. Each story touches on an undeniable past and a possible future: a glimpse of who we are and what we might become"--… (more)
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Toni Morrison said "If there's a book that you want to read, but it hasn't been written yet, then you must write it." -- A.J. Bermudez's new book beat me to it!

Stories No One Hopes Are About Them left me both vindicated and challenged: a view on the terminal politesse of the Anthropocene somehow working into a simultaneous frenzied spiral and cogent terminus.

I can't say much more for fear of spoilers (there are revelatory multitudes on every page), but I can reiterate what more intelligent, more well-read folks than I have said:

It is a dazzling, must-read debut from an author you'll for whom you'll want to save space on the shelf.

-- also, It's a must have for lovers of short fiction -- and especially those who are fans of journals like the Kenyon Review and VQR (RIP) Gertrude Press. ( )
  josno | Nov 18, 2022 |
Stories No One Hopes Are About Them by AJ Bermudez is a collection of short stories that should be savored and not rushed through. Characters and situations that demand your attention and your understanding.

I usually use collections, of either short stories or essays, as something handy to pick up when I don't have time to dive back into a longer work. The ideal book of this sort will allow me to read a story or essay then, when I go back to whatever I might be doing, it ferments in my mind, deepening my understanding or raising more questions. Bermudez has put together a collection that matches any I have read for a long time. Each story stayed with me for a while and a couple are with me still.

One thing that struck me about reading these stories was that I didn't feel like I was sprinting through a story that was written simply to get me to the end. I enjoy many stories of that kind, but these made me spend some time with the characters and their situations. Even the much shorter ones. And many had a little nod to the fact that what we just read was but a part of a longer story. Maybe what a character will tell as part of future therapy or what a character is going to miss hearing/learning as a result of dying.

I would certainly recommend this to readers of short stories but I would also recommend this to readers who might shy away from them. I think this collection can rekindle any dying appreciation for the form you might have.

Reviewed from a copy made available by the publisher via NetGalley. ( )
  pomo58 | Aug 11, 2022 |
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"A rogue assistant orchestrates a spectacular art world con in northern India. A custodian-turned-thief absconds to Antarctica while awaiting her trial. A family's underwater vacation is subverted by a murderous school of fish. In a series of 20 short fictions, Stories No One Hopes Are About Them takes the reader to the ends of the earth, from the ocean floor to the mountains of Himachal Pradesh, from an 18th-century German "house of the dead" to death row at Sing Sing to a party at the local zoo. We're guided by cocktail servers, serial killers, and theme park princesses. Many of these characters--like us--should probably be elsewhere. At once playfully dark and slyly hopeful, Stories No One Hopes Are About Them explores convergences of power, privilege, and place. Characters who are ni de aquí, ni de allá--neither from here nor there--straddle competing worlds, disrupt paradigms, and transition from objects of other people's stories to active subjects and protagonists of their own. Narratives of humanity and environment entwine, with nuanced themes of colonization, queerness, and evolution at the forefront. Big things happen in this collection: wars, revelations, ecological catastrophes, curses, crimes. But it's also a collection of small intimacies: misremembered names, chipped teeth, and private rituals; unexpected alliances and barely touched knees beneath uniform skirts; minutiae of the natural world; incidents of quietly, achingly, and delightfully transgressing the familiar. With delicate wit, a breakneck pace, and a featherweight boxing style of nimble, merciless prose, Stories No One Hopes Are About Them is about the places and personhoods we inhabit, including the places and people we probably shouldn't be. Each story touches on an undeniable past and a possible future: a glimpse of who we are and what we might become"--

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