Company: Stories

by Shannon Sanders

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A richly detailed, brilliantly woven debut collection about the lives and lore of one Black family Shannon Sanders's sparkling debut brings us into the company of the Collins family and their acquaintances as they meet, bicker, compete, celebrate, worry, keep and reveal secrets, build lives and careers, and endure. Moving from Atlantic City to New York to DC, from the 1960s to the 2000s, from law students to drag performers to violinists to matriarchs, Company tells a multifaceted, show more multigenerational saga in thirteen stories. Each piece in Company includes a moment when a guest arrives at someone's home. In "The Good, Good Men," two brothers reunite to oust a "deadbeat" boyfriend from their mother's house. In "The Everest Society," the brothers' sister anxiously prepares for a home visit from a social worker before adopting a child. In "Birds of Paradise," their aunt, newly promoted to university provost, navigates a minefield of microaggressions at her own welcome party. And in the haunting title story, the provost's sister finds her solitary life disrupted when her late sister's daughter comes calling. These are stories about intimacy, societal and familial obligations, and the ways inheritances shape our fates. Buoyant, somber, sharp, and affectionate, this collection announces a remarkable new voice in fiction. show less

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3 reviews
A collection of thirteen short stories that all involve some type of visit with company, most of which revolve around three generations of a Black family that lives in Atlantic City, New York, and Washington, D.C.

When the story collection opened with a genealogy of the family, including a cross-out and correction of a first name, I was immediately intrigued. Most of the stories center on the four Collins sisters - Cassandra, Felice, Lela and Suzette - and their children, though a few are about other families, and they're not always chronological. The structure reminded me a little of Olive Kitteridge, though instead of a portrait of one person, we get a whole family and the breadth of their relationships with each other and the world. show more Two stories, for example, focus on a party for Cassandra becoming provost. One gives us Cassandra's perspective and the other, that of her nieces. Sanders' assured prose and character development is impressive in this debut collection, and I will definitely be on the lookout for more by her. show less
½
This is a collection of interconnected short stories set in and around Washington DC and centering on the members of a large, extended family. As with any large family, some are doing well and some are struggling and who that is may change over time. There are family stories, family expectations and the roles assigned in childhood that may chafe in adulthood. There are family stories where the reality is somewhat different and what is expected changes depending on the generation.

They would only be in the house on Ashburn Street for six or nine months, a year at the absolute most, and so although Merritt knew she should make a point of meeting the neighbors, she put it off for two weeks after the move-in. She had begun to specialize in show more putting things off; these days she was leaden as an anchor, and Ashburn Street was the ocean floor.

These stories stand on their own and the connections between the characters in each story reveal themselves as the book unspools. A character in one story is in the background of another, an event in one story is a familiar tale that bears just a glancing resemblance to the facts in another. There are two stories that recount the same event from different vantage points that was particularly effective. Throughout these stories, Sanders writes about people just trying to get through the challenges of their lives. It's a solid collection and I'm already looking forward to seeing what she writes next.
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Who doesn't appreciate a book that opens with a family tree? This one has a scratchout in it to jumpstart the reader's interest. This series of connected stories, mostly about the Collins family, the four sisters and their mother and their children, is totally delightful, simple, and profound, and worthy of a second read. Most of the events - celebrations, deaths, bad choices of partners, sibling quarrels - could be categorized as mundane, but are made magical by the perfection of the language and its underlying sense of humor and pathos. My favorite is "Rioja", which tells a Thanksgiving story that introduces a new family to a Collins woman who is being courted by a man who decides to sabotage her acceptance. The collection is show more reminiscent of Deesha Philyaw's award-winning Secret Lives of Church Ladies, all heart and surprise and drama. In my Top Ten of 2023.

Quote: "Finally, time moved like it had somewhere to go."
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3 Works 116 Members

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Morrison, Anna (Cover designer)

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Genres
General Fiction, Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
813.6Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English2000-
LCC
PS3619 .A534 .C66Language and LiteratureAmerican literature
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Members
63
Popularity
491,105
Reviews
3
Rating
(4.11)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
8