Cover Image: WE WILL TELL YOU OTHERWISE

WE WILL TELL YOU OTHERWISE

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Member Reviews

This is a really thought provoking short story collection. The characters feel tangible and their struggles relatable. The themes and topics addressed in this collection have a searing sincerity about them.

The bathos of familial loss, miscarriage, marital issues spliced against sharp wit, trivial gossip and family vacations makes this collection poignant and breathtaking. A very talented writer and a very impressive debut compilation.

Raw and frank this book of short stories really dives deep into the human psyche and explores the fragile line of mortality.

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Beth Mayer is a master of the short story.Each story in this collection takes us in different directions can be very dark emotional moving.An author I will follow and recommend.#netgalley#she writes press

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I received a free electronic copy of this collection of shorts from Netgalley, Beth Mayer, and Black Lawrence Press. Thank you all for sharing your hard work with me. I have read this compilation of my own volition and this review reflects my honest opinion of this work.

These essays have in common darkness that is compelling. Most of them hit a satisfying nerve - there were a couple beyond me - but for the most part, I found this an excellent read. I am pleased to refer this work to friends and family.

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'You have to count your blessings. Or pick your poison. And for God’s sake, not every single thing means some other terrible thing. But that I keep to myself.'

This collection of stories by Beth Mayer will play with your emotions, is it dark? It can be, human behavior isn’t always pretty. It is moments of people at their best and worst. The very first story can break your heart as in Tell Me Something I Don’t Know a father tells us about his mother’s visit to give he and his wife a break, trying to get through the heavy days of their little boy Ethan’s chemo for his brain tumor. How do you grab happiness watching your child suffer, how do you break out of the fear that something worse is waiting around the corner?

In When The Saints Tell Their Own we’re left to wonder who is broken, when Blue (the narrator’s brother), checks himself into a hospital because ‘something is wrong with him’ but she is the one talking to the saints. Each story has fractures, I loved Let Her Tell The Way. It is the summer of 1978 and a family of four is meant to go on a vacation but the father (Bill’s) loyalty is always his clients (he owns and runs a funeral home). But this time, Peggy (wife/mother) is going to go on the trip as planned, of course her eldest child and headstrong daughter is going to test her. “The girl thought of herself first (always) and it was ugly.” What stuck to my guts is the disappointment, their trip is closer to reality than all the happy ads we see about how great getting away is. You take your family issues with you. Even the little ones can’t rally enough happiness to make it work, “The children bore too much.” There is a short little story too from the “summer people” who really don’t mind the old bachelor whose family has been on the lake for generations… no, not at all. They tolerate the locals.. sure they do. If they don’t stay long they won’t be infected by whatever miseries visit the locals, right?

The lump in my throat remained from Don’t Tell Me How This Story Ends, it’s for imperfect families, the ones who have a revisionist in their midst. Truth is malleable for some, the convenience of old age or ‘forgetting’ to suit your own conscience… it hit hard for me. The most difficult family member (here it’s a father) but it can be anyone, grandparent, mother, sibling, uncle… that their fragility humanizes them, the unfairness of it all, when it seems they should be punished for the cruelty they spread. Life doesn’t play out like that though does it? Not always.

A young boy seeks council about his future through his classmate Suzy, a man fancies old-fashioned ways until his world is rocked by a mysterious girl who will help him navigate the technology he hates and a young girl finds a best friend in the beautiful Cha Cha McGee who the whole town may want to mark just as badly as Lady Pearson, the harlot, witch… These stories are all about human nature in its many forms. This is an author to watch.

Publication Date: August 20, 2019

Black Hawk Press

Beth Mayer is the Hudson Prize Winner

for more information https://www.blacklawrence.com/we-will-tell-you-otherwise/

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