In Haste I Write You This Note

Elisavietta Ritchie

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Washington Writers' Publishing House img Link Publisher

Belletristik/Erzählende Literatur

Beschreibung

The first section, "The Lady in Eight," is a four-part narrative about romantic encounters. Its opening piece, "In Haste I Write You This Note," presents a woman's internal rumblings as she weighs the pros and cons of inviting a neighbor to her home. Her obsessive search for the right words--how does one invite a male acquaintance to one's apartment?--is poignant, wrenching. Three other vignettes round out this section. The man's perspective and observations about the meeting and ensuing flirtation are offered; likewise, readers will feel desires both painful and primal as they grapple with the longing the female presents.

       The second series of stories, "Communications from Paradise," assess the ways individuals utilize psychological denial. Some literally deny all unpleasantness, whether a poisonous snake or an unfaithful mate. Others, like the protagonist in "The Big Sixtieth," confront misery head-on, bravely struggling to make sense of a best friend's unexpected death.

 

       Section Three, "Marching On," addresses relationships and the ties that both bind and strangle. "Marching to War," one of the most moving stories in the anthology, is written in the voice of a woman whose only daughter has enlisted in the military. The mother, a single-parent, has been too busy raising her brood and working to actively protest violence. Now, she worries that her lack of political engagement has unwittingly caused her child to accept armed conflict as inevitable. The ten other pieces in this section are equally compelling. Domestic violence, human/animal communications, poverty and divorce, all are treated with freshness--an emotional clarity--that startles.

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Schlagwörter

family drama, short stories, award-winning short stories, linked short stories