BRAWLER: STORIES (2026)
By
Lauren Groff
Penguin
Random House, 248 pages (Large Print version)
★★★
Lauren
Graff is one of my favorite novelists and has a devoted following. Brawler
has garnered rave reviews and several of the stories are stunners. Of the nine
stories in the collection, though, there are a few that underwhelmed me,
including the collection’s title tale. Its protagonist, Sara, is an individual
with two personalities, the tough (aka/brawler) athlete and the shy kid aware
of being an outcast because of her poverty, sick mother, and unkempt
appearance. In my view, how this shaped the rest of her life warranted more
than 12 pages and few sentences at the end.
On
the other hand, her theme of “the ceaseless battle between human’s dark and
light angels” “To Sunland” nails it. Goff explores 17-year-old Joanie’s dilemma
after her mother dies and leaves her mentally challenged brother Buddy in her
care. Joannie has a scholarship to a college in Maine and can’t wait to get out
of Florida. As it happens, a lot of Floridians try to get what they can out of
Joanie before she goes, her mother’s things, a cheap feel, a captive audience
for evangelizing, her money…. Can she leave Buddy at a facility and get on with
her life? It’s a taut tale about need versus guilt.
“Birdie”
comes at this from a different angle. Five old friends gather two decades later
when Birdie lies dying. More accurately, four were friends; Nicole never
considered herself part of anyone’s in-crowd. Nic can’t help but think of the
decisions she and the other four made or were made for them. Reunions are often
a terrible idea, especially under unhappy circumstances. More terrible still is
to play a game of the “worst thing” one has ever done with people you no longer
know and were unsure of back in the proverbial day. Everyone shares, though a
lot is inferred, left unsaid, or akin to fictions made up for Sunday
confession. Nic feels very guilty about something, but she’s only truthful with
Birdie in private. Is there a greater grace than to confess for real and find
out that the person you thought you had wronged never gave the incident a
second thought?
Another
excellent story is “What’s the Time Mr. Wolf? It’s the longest story in the
book and takes us inside a well-to-do banking family. How many stories about
the wealthy involve the black sheep of the family, the member who is “as dumb
as… newts,” happy to exploit his privilege, drinks too much, or just drifts and
assumes everything will work out? That’s Chip; he’s all of those things. After
four years of failing at banking his family packs him up and involuntarily
sends him to a remote part of New Hampshire to dry out. There he meets Pearl
Spang, an old conquest who acts as if she never met him before. She’s out of
his class and probably has no recollection of him. Chip will discover some
hidden resolve, but this one has a bleak ending.
The
above are emblematic of how Groff deals with human foibles. In essence they are
like the old cartoons in which an angel sits on one shoulder and a devil on the
other. Groff understands that short stories need their protagonists to clash
with antagonists, either in the flesh or in the form of intangibles such as
ambition, revenge, and temptation.
Goff
is quite skillful at turning phrases and writing poignant sentences. These
shine through even when the narratives fail to resonate. Her last chapter, “Annunciation”
deals with real poverty and a variant that comes when someone with resources
simply stops caring and drifts into perceived poverty. One such woman,
Griselda, told stories that were true but were thought to be fanciful. Art
factors into “Annunciation” and our antagonist muses over precious works of
art: “There are a thousand Madonnas here, with a thousand different faces. Each
Madonna wears the face of a particular mortal woman whom the artist loved. Each
woman is one in whom the animal was briefly overcome by the god that lived
within her.” In “Birdie” Nic describes her flight home: “She rose into the
flight, that gorgeous liminal moment that’s a respite between lives; and
descended again into the grind of the quotidian.”
Words
such as these sing to me long after the stories fade.
Rob
Weir
BRAWLER: STORIES (2026)
By
Lauren Groff
Penguin
Random House, 248 pages (Large Print version)
★★★
Lauren
Graff is one of my favorite novelists and has a devoted following. Brawler
has garnered rave reviews and several of the stories are stunners. Of the nine
stories in the collection, though, there are a few that underwhelmed me,
including the collection’s title tale. Its protagonist, Sara, is an individual
with two personalities, the tough (aka/brawler) athlete and the shy kid aware
of being an outcast because of her poverty, sick mother, and unkempt
appearance. In my view, how this shaped the rest of her life warranted more
than 12 pages and few sentences at the end.
On
the other hand, her theme of “the ceaseless battle between human’s dark and
light angels” “To Sunland” nails it. Goff explores 17-year-old Joanie’s dilemma
after her mother dies and leaves her mentally challenged brother Buddy in her
care. Joannie has a scholarship to a college in Maine and can’t wait to get out
of Florida. As it happens, a lot of Floridians try to get what they can out of
Joanie before she goes, her mother’s things, a cheap feel, a captive audience
for evangelizing, her money…. Can she leave Buddy at a facility and get on with
her life? It’s a taut tale about need versus guilt.
“Birdie”
comes at this from a different angle. Five old friends gather two decades later
when Birdie lies dying. More accurately, four were friends; Nicole never
considered herself part of anyone’s in-crowd. Nic can’t help but think of the
decisions she and the other four made or were made for them. Reunions are often
a terrible idea, especially under unhappy circumstances. More terrible still is
to play a game of the “worst thing” one has ever done with people you no longer
know and were unsure of back in the proverbial day. Everyone shares, though a
lot is inferred, left unsaid, or akin to fictions made up for Sunday
confession. Nic feels very guilty about something, but she’s only truthful with
Birdie in private. Is there a greater grace than to confess for real and find
out that the person you thought you had wronged never gave the incident a
second thought?
Another
excellent story is “What’s the Time Mr. Wolf? It’s the longest story in the
book and takes us inside a well-to-do banking family. How many stories about
the wealthy involve the black sheep of the family, the member who is “as dumb
as… newts,” happy to exploit his privilege, drinks too much, or just drifts and
assumes everything will work out? That’s Chip; he’s all of those things. After
four years of failing at banking his family packs him up and involuntarily
sends him to a remote part of New Hampshire to dry out. There he meets Pearl
Spang, an old conquest who acts as if she never met him before. She’s out of
his class and probably has no recollection of him. Chip will discover some
hidden resolve, but this one has a bleak ending.
The
above are emblematic of how Groff deals with human foibles. In essence they are
like the old cartoons in which an angel sits on one shoulder and a devil on the
other. Groff understands that short stories need their protagonists to clash
with antagonists, either in the flesh or in the form of intangibles such as
ambition, revenge, and temptation.
Goff
is quite skillful at turning phrases and writing poignant sentences. These
shine through even when the narratives fail to resonate. Her last chapter, “Annunciation”
deals with real poverty and a variant that comes when someone with resources
simply stops caring and drifts into perceived poverty. One such woman,
Griselda, told stories that were true but were thought to be fanciful. Art
factors into “Annunciation” and our antagonist muses over precious works of
art: “There are a thousand Madonnas here, with a thousand different faces. Each
Madonna wears the face of a particular mortal woman whom the artist loved. Each
woman is one in whom the animal was briefly overcome by the god that lived
within her.” In “Birdie” Nic describes her flight home: “She rose into the
flight, that gorgeous liminal moment that’s a respite between lives; and
descended again into the grind of the quotidian.”
Words
such as these sing to me long after the stories fade.
Rob
Weir