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Things You Should Know: A Collection of Stories Kindle Edition
In this stunningly original collection, A. M. Homes writes with terrifying compassion about the things that matter most. Homes’s distinctive narrative illuminates our dreams and desires, our memories and losses, and demonstrates how extraordinary the ordinary can be. With uncanny emotional accuracy, wit, and empathy, Homes takes us places we recognize but would rather not go alone.
A New York Times Notable Book
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From the Inside Flap
In this stunningly original collection, A. M. Homes writes with terrifying compassion about the things that matter most. Homes's distinctive narrative illuminates our dreams and desires, our memories and losses, and demonstrates how extraordinary the ordinary can be. With uncanny emotional accuracy, wit, and empathy, Homes takes us places we recognize but would rather not go alone.
--Michael CunninghamFrom the Back Cover
The most daring voice of her generation, A. M. Homes writes with terrifying compassion about the things that matter most. Homes's distinctive narratives illuminate our dreams and desires, our memories and losses, and our profound need for connection, and demonstrate how extraordinary the ordinary can be. In "Chinese Lesson," we meet Geordie, a man watching over his wandering, senile mother-in-law by means of an electronic chip implanted in the back of her neck. In "Remedy," an advertising executive bolts from the city one afternoon for the imagined comfort of her childhood home and finds that her parents have allowed Ray, an eccentric wellness guru, to move in. Sexy and inspiring, "Georgica" offers a meditative narrative about one woman's unconventional strategy for getting pregnant. "The Former First Lady and the Football Hero" is the deeply moving, darkly comic story of a former First Lady's courage in dealing with the President as his mind slowly evaporates.
In these beautifully written stories, we find shape-shifters, children running headlong into the darkness of adolescent sexuality, a man passionately wanting to live but not knowing how. And, most important, we find ourselves.
An expert literary witness, A. M. Homes takes us places we would not go alone and brings us back -- always with uncanny emotional accuracy, wit, and empathy. She is one of the master practitioners of American fiction, and Things You Should Know is a landmark collection.
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The Chinese Lesson
I am walking, holding a small screen, watching the green dot move like the blip of a plane, the blink of a ship's radar. Searching. I am on the lookout for submarines. I am an air traffic controller trying to keep everything at the right distance. I am lost.
A man steps out of the darkness onto the sidewalk. "Plane gone down?" he asks.
It is nearly night; the sky is still blue at the top, but it is dark down here.
"I was just walking the dog," he says.
I nod. The dog is nowhere to be seen.
"You're not from around here are you?"
"Not originally," I say. "But we're over on Maple now."
"Tierney," the man says. "John Tierney."
"Harris," I say. "Geordie Harris."
"Welcome to the neighborhood. Welcome to town."
He points to my screen; the dot seems to have stopped traveling.
"I was hoping to hell that was a toy - a remote control," he says. "I was hoping to have some fun. Are you driving a car or floating a boat somewhere around here?"
"It's a chip," I say, cutting him off. "A global positioning screen. I'm looking for my mother-in-law."
There is a scratching sound from inside a nearby privet, and the unmistakable scent of dog shit rises like smoke.
"Good boy," Tierney says. "He doesn't like to do his business in public. Can't blame him - if they had me shitting outside, I'd hide in the bushes too."
Tierney - I hear it like tyranny. Tyrant, teaser, taunting me about my tracking system, my lost mother-in-law.
"It's not a game," I say, looking down at the blinking green dot.
A yellow Lab pushes out of the bushes and Tierney clips the leash back onto his collar. "Let's go, boy," Tierney says, slapping the side of his leg. "Good luck," he calls, pulling the dog down the road.
The cell phone clipped to my belt rings. "Who was that?" Susan asks. "Was that someone you know?"
"It was a stranger, a total stranger, looking for a playmate." I glance down at the screen. "She doesn't seem to be moving now."
"Is your antenna up?" Susan asks.
There is a pause. I hear her talking to Kate. "See Daddy. See Daddy across the street, wave to Daddy. Kate's waving," she tells me. I stare across the road at the black Volvo idling by the curb. With my free hand I wave back.
"That's Daddy," Susan says, handing Kate the phone.
"What are you doing, Daddy?" Kate asks. Her intonation, her annoyance, oddly accusatory for a three-year-old.
"I'm looking for Grandma."
"Me too," Kate giggles.
"Give the phone to Mommy."
"I don't think so," Kate says.
"Bye, Kate."
"What's new?" Kate says - it's her latest phrase.
"Bye-bye," I say, hanging up on her.
I step off the sidewalk and dart between the houses, through the grass alley that separates one man's yard from another's. A sneak, a thief, a prowling trespasser, I pull my flashlight out of my jacket and flick it on. The narrow Ever Ready beam catches patios and planters and picnic tables by surprise. I am afraid to call out, to attract attention. Ahead of me there is a basketball court, a slide, a sandbox, and there she is, sailing through my beam like an apparition. Her black hair blowing, her hands smoothly clutching the chain-link ropes of the swing as though they were reins. I catch her in mid-flight. Legs swinging in and out. I hold the light on her there and gone.
"I'm flying," she says, sailing through the night.
I step in close so that she has to stop swinging. "Did you have a pleasant flight, Mrs. Ha?"
"It was nice."
"Was there a movie?"
She eases herself off the swing and looks at me like I'm crazy. She looks down at the tracking device. "It's no game," Mrs. Ha says, putting her arm through mine. I lead her back through the woods. "What's for dinner, Georgie?" she says. And I hear the invisible echo of Susan's voice correcting - it's not Georgie, it's Geordie.
"What would you like, Mrs. Ha?"
In the distance, a fat man presses against a sliding glass door, looking out at us, his breath fogging the pane.
Susan is at the computer, drawing. She is making a map, a grid of the neighborhood. She is giving us something to go on in the future - coordinates.
She is an architect, everything is line, everything is order. Our house is G4. The blue light of the screen pours over her, pressing the flat planes of her face flatter still - illuminating. She hovers in an eerie blue glow.
"I called Ken," I say.
Ken is the one who had the chip put in. He is Susan's brother. When Mrs. Ha was sedated for a colonoscopy, Ken had the chip implanted at the bottom of her neck, above her shoulder blades. The chip company specialist came and stood by while a plastic surgeon inserted it just under the skin. Before they let her go home, they tested it by wheeling her gurney all over the hospital while Ken sat in the waiting room tracking her on the small screen.
"Why?"
"I called him about her memory. I was wondering if we should increase her medication."
Ken is a psychopharmacologist, a specialist in the containment of feeling. He used to be a stoner and now he is a shrink. He has no affect, no emotions.
"And?" she says.
"He asked if she seemed agitated."
"She seems perfectly happy," Susan says.
"I know," I say, not telling Susan what I told Ken - Susan is the one who's agitated.
"Does she know where she is?" Ken had asked. There had been a pause, a moment where I wondered if he was asking about Susan or his mother. "I'm not always sure," I'd said, failing to differentiate.
(Continues...)
Excerpted from Things You Should Knowby Homes, A. M. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.Copyright © 2003 Mia Ryan
All right reserved.
Product details
- ASIN : B000R8PF96
- Publisher : HarperCollins e-books (October 13, 2009)
- Publication date : October 13, 2009
- Language : English
- File size : 2.5 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 228 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #430,372 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #442 in Literary Short Stories
- #1,877 in Romance Literary Fiction
- #5,654 in Short Stories Anthologies
- Customer Reviews:
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- Reviewed in the United States on April 27, 2022Needed it for school and it was goood! I really enjoyed it!
- Reviewed in the United States on January 9, 2014I picked up A M Homes short story collection after seeing it on an earlier NY Times Notable Books of the Year list. I was quite impressed and found the stories to largely be interesting and in some cases head-turning. There are 11 stories in the collection and all focus on some aspect of domestic life. As with many short story collections, you probably have read some of these as they appeared in various magazines over the course of the 90s. Perhaps my favorite story centered around a woman who recovered from a serious accident and decided to attempt to impregnate herself by watching couples have sex and then collecting the used condoms, saving the sperm, and injecting into her body. Wow. You can hardly make something like that up yourself and it was an amazing story to read. Other stories explore the relationships between mothers and daughters and even one that hits quite close to the history buffs amongst you where a former President of the USA struggles with Alzheimer's as does his pretty and slender wife who takes care of him as he continues to fall further into a fog. A great collection that I highly recommend.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 3, 2015This is a series of short stories with a SF basis. The stories are wonderfully weird.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 10, 2004As is usually the case with Homes, these stories focus on discontented suburbanites. Mostly weaker men, stronger women. Some very good, if tough to read stories. As always, Homes's writing is quick-hitting. Especially as she deals with more serious topics: a husband and wife couple in which the woman's cancer is exposing the weaknesses in their relationship, the story of a man who hits and kills a kid with his car, and a story about Nancy and Ronald Reagan and dealing with his Alzheimer's. Overall, the stories were less outrageous than some of her other stuff, and several of them seemed to end with punch lines, which I didn't care for. But pretty good stuff otherwise.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 9, 2008Another book that I picked up simply because it had a great title was Things You Should Know by A. M. Holmes. Not only do I like to know things (so a book that detailed what I should know was particularly appealing), but it has a lovely picture of a penguin-badger on the cover.
I know you're thinking "Penguin-badgers? We don't need no stinkin' penguin-badgers!", but in this case you might want to reconsider. This is a collection of short stories is wonderful, despite the yellow post-it note that informs me: "this book sucks" (I love used books. :)
She writes from the heart, which is something that reviewers say quite often but never define. This is unsurprising, as the heart is a tricky thing. Most authors tend not to write about four chambers that endlessly pump oxygenated erythrocytes, choosing instead to write from a metaphorical heart. This is the approach that A. M. Homes has taken. In her case, however, "writing from the heart" and "writing heart-warming stories" are very different.
She opens the collection with "The Chinese Lesson", which doesn't so much explore the issue of an interracial marriage (half unrecognized) as drop you into it and let you find your own way out (sans-machete). She then goes into incomprehensible magical realism in "Raft in Water, Floating", which doesn't even being to make sense until you read "The Weather Outside is Sunny and Bright", her other magical realism story later in the volume. Even then, it's not entirely clear what's going on, but such things do not have to be understood to be appreciated.
Then, just in case you were liking her characters, you get to meet a woman who you really want to like, but can't quite manage to. This is largely because she is emotionally crippled and indulges in what I can only describe as "genetic rape". "Georgica" is a spooky story, one about loss and pain and longing. I'm still not sure if I liked it. I certainly didn't enjoy it... but of all the stories in this book, it's the most memorable.
The woman in "Remedy", however, is very likable. It's a story about maturity and anxiety. It's about trust and communication... and about how easy it is to lose them both in the business of the everyday.
In contrast, "Rockets Around the Moon" doesn't hit nearly as hard. It's about family -- families of birth and families of choice. It really should be more powerful than it is, but I just didn't find myself caring about the characters. People with other upbringings might have different reactions to it.
Then I read "Please Remain Calm" and my world was shaken. Some of you know bits of my past. This was a story about marriage and suicide. I'll just say that it hit very close to home, and I may have been crying at the end. In some ways, I wish I had read it years ago. In others, I'm glad that I have taken the path I have.
The title story "Things You Should Know" is about uncertainty and (possibly) a psychotic break. Generally speaking, it does not present the things you should know, but it does discuss them in their absence. It's hard to boil a three page story down further, so I will merely say that it's about expectation and the eventually realization that, contrary to the common message of society, you have to make a life for yourself. Things don't magically fall into place because there are no places for them to land.
"The Whiz Kids" is about sexual abuse among children. I did not enjoy it... but then I wasn't supposed to.
The other story that stuck with me was "Do Not Disturb". Homes has a way of writing emotionally distant characters, and it really shines in this story. You get to meet a woman who is amazingly egotistical and self-centered as well as her husband who never stands up for himself. It's an unbalanced relationship between two people who become progressively more unbalanced as the story progresses. It's good. It's not fun, but it's good... and it's probably good to read stories that aren't fun sometimes.
The story ends with "The Former First Lady and the Football Hero", which (to spoil it) is about Nancy Regan's life taking care of her husband as he slips into Alzheimer's. It's really good. I never thought that I'd think that about a story about a political figure... especially one with whom's policies I disagree, but it's just so well written. Unlike most of the characters in this book who are somewhat distant and crippled, Nancy Regan is portrayed as being amazingly strong and capable. It's a great end to the collection.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 23, 2017Amazing. As always.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 24, 2002Emotional trainwrecks are served up as only A. M. Homes can; clever staging and just enough room to bloom.
Homes will introduce you to relationships that have only tattered buttons to push, relationships that are beyond broken.
Strangely, the battered participants have no choice but to continue on, no tease of a resolution, it doesn't come.
In keeping with her other books, Homes predictably drops the whole mess in your lap which can leave you feeling burdened and oddly responsible.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 14, 2007I read this book in three days commuting to work.... I just couldn't put it down! What fascinated me, is that many of the characters in the short stories seem somehow to be detached from life, as if they - each in their own and sometimes bizarre ways - observe life rather than live it. Some stories are sad, others downright depressing, but they are always written with compassion and just a touch of humor.
Top reviews from other countries
- JviewReviewed in the United Kingdom on August 13, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars A M Homes works her magic again
I discovered A M Homes by chance and have enjoyed each of her books since. A refreshing voice and a perceptive author.
-
Lucie C.Reviewed in France on January 27, 2014
2.0 out of 5 stars Sans queue ni tête.
Dans mon esprit, baigné des nouvelle de Roald Dahl, une nouvelle se doit d'avoir une fin, surprenante, si possible. Dans ce recueil de nouvelles, pas de début, pas de fin (on a parfois l'impression que l'auteur s'est arrêté à mi paragraphe!), pas réellement d'histoire, un élément fantastique mais pas vraiment, certaines nouvelles sont trèèèèès longues mais sans aucune fin pour autant. (ça doit être sa marque de fa brique, personnellement je n'adhère pas du tout)
Bref, je n'ai pas aimé du tout.
- briony kim webbReviewed in the United Kingdom on June 16, 2015
4.0 out of 5 stars Four Stars
Love this author, interesting collection of short stories. Didn't like them all, but still worth a read.
- shelaghReviewed in the United Kingdom on March 25, 2014
5.0 out of 5 stars great read
This was a first time read of this author by I have bought several more of her books because I loved this so much. Laugh out loud funny and outrageous at times, it sucks you in and you never want o put it down.
- JuliaReviewed in the United Kingdom on October 19, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars Masterful
I have read almost all of her novels, and I was delighted to discover that her short stories are little pieces of perfection and surprise.