Miranda July
2007
rating: good
plot: These short stories are brief glimpses into the extreme emotions of socially awkward people.
Back in 2007 Miranda July made waves with her impressively low-tech self-promotion for this book. Go to her website to be amused (click on the tiny pink arrow on the bottom right corner).
The stories aren’t your typical beginning-middle-end tales. Instead, July presents a sort of snapshot of the thoughts of a seemingly average person. But doesn’t getting even a fleeting glimpse into someone’s mind always reveal things are not what they appear to be?
I usually stay mum on all plot points of a novel, but I think I’ll tell you about one of the stories just to give you an example. The one story that stuck with me was about a woman who was born with a disfiguring birthmark on her face, then later in life had it completely surgically eradicated. Although she married and had a happy life, she was consumed by thoughts that if her husband had met her with the birthmark, he wouldn’t have loved her. This despite the fact that her husband seemed like a caring person who already told her it wouldn’t matter to him what she looked like. She never realized her preoccupation wasn’t about him at all; if she still had the birthmark, she wouldn’t have been ready to fall in love. Aren’t these the kind of frustrating what-if questions we all ask ourselves?