Ratings5
Average rating3.8
One of the most treasured writers of our day, award-winning author Elizabeth McCracken, is an undisputed virtuoso of the short story, and this new collection features her most vibrant and heartrending work to date In these stories, the mysterious bonds of family are tested, transformed, fractured, and fortified. A recent widower and his adult son ferry to a craggy Scottish island in search of puffins. An actress who plays a children's game-show villainess ushers in the New Year with her deadbeat half brother. A mother, pining for her children, feasts on loaves of challah to fill the void. A new couple navigates a tightrope walk toward love. And on a trip to a Texas water park with their son, two fathers each confront a personal fear. With sentences that crackle and spark and showcase her trademark wit, McCracken traces how our closely held desires--for intimacy, atonement, comfort--bloom and wither against the indifferent passing of time. Her characters embark on journeys that leave them indelibly changed--and so do her readers. The Souvenir Museum showcases the talents of one of our finest contemporary writers as she tenderly takes the pulse of our collective and individual lives. --Carol Birch, The Guardian
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I classify McCracken as quirky . . . a bit out there with her stories. Though I thoroughly enjoyed reading her novel “Bowlaway”, it was too much for me to get through this latest short story book within the two weeks I had it from the library. I will say that if I owned it, I would have read the stories at my leisure. It is worth reading as I enjoyed many of the stories I did read in the first half of the book.
Yesterday I read a romance novel about two identical twins who switch places and (probably not really spoilers for anyone who reads a lot of romance novels) end up with new, more satisfying jobs and with new, more satisfying relationships. Complete Hallmark Channel stuff.
It is satisfying. But, after a bit of reflection, not.
Today I finished The Souvenir Museum. In The Souvenir Museum, relationships go wildly asunder, life-changing events arise out of nowhere and shake our worlds, people are here and then people are gone. You know, real life.
And yet it, too, is oddly satisfying. It sits with you. This is how things are. Really.
One a pop of candy. The other a glass of French wine.