The Company of Strangers

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Pub Date Jan 10 2023 | Archive Date Jan 01 2023

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Description

The stories in Jen Michalski’s new collection reveal an America in which ideas of genuine community ring false and the spiritual backbone of family life is damaged, perhaps beyond repair.

Characters, many of them queer Gen-Xers of a certain age, find themselves looking―often desperately―for a way to understand the lives they’ve lived and a way to move forward with at least the possibility of future happiness. In “Long Haul,” a gay man visits his estranged uncle to lay to rest the unresolved guilt they both feel over the childhood disappearance of his sister. In “Great White” a gay man who was the sperm donor to a lesbian friend’s pregnancy, is confronted with the possibility of genuine parenthood when the friend’s partner dies and she is laid-low by grief.

And in the title story, a young woman affirms her sexuality by having an affair with her brother’s wife; the fallout leading her to regain her footing only when she befriends an elderly gay couple vacationing in the area. In stories that relentlessly demonstrate the tensions of the 21st century,

Michalski’s The Company of Strangers provides a sometimes comical, sometimes touching portrait of what is perhaps our most pressing question: How do we make a life?

The stories in Jen Michalski’s new collection reveal an America in which ideas of genuine community ring false and the spiritual backbone of family life is damaged, perhaps beyond repair.

Characters...


Advance Praise

A kaleidoscopic and candid exploration of the gritty corners of our desires and all that is left unsaid. By turns irreverent and deeply heartbreaking, Michalski masterfully constructs a collage of sexuality, belonging, and a search for what is possible atop strip malls, parking lots, and bowling alleys. Reminiscent, in some ways, of the genre-pushing work of Zach Doss, Etgar Keret, and Kim Chinquee, Michalski unequivocally carves out a space that is all her own—daring, deeply human, and often gut-wrenching.--Sequoia Nagamatsu, National Bestselling author of How High We Go in the Dark

 

""Fueled by love, longing, and regret, these captivating stories drop us into the lives of people we come to care deeply about. These are rich, wild, surprising romps of stories with endings that wow. What an immense pleasure to be in the company of these strangers, thanks to Jen Michalski's brilliant storytelling."" ----Kathy Anderson, author of Bull and Other Stories

 

""Prepare to be plunged into the unexpected (Turkey calmer, anyone? Meteor?). Jen Michalski is at her melancholy, hopeful, big-hearted best in this gorgeous collection of stories where the aching past―filled with might-have-beens and never-weres―resonate and haunt."" --―Leslie Pietrzyk, author of Admit This to No One


""The Company of Strangers is a thoughtful and thorough dive into community with its hope, falsehoods, and trappings. These fantastic characters hilariously broke my heart. They struggle to make a life out of desire and disappointments, and I rooted for everyone. If Lily King and Alice Munro had a queer prose baby, it would be Jen Michalski.""--Melissa Scholes Young, author of The Hive and Flood

A kaleidoscopic and candid exploration of the gritty corners of our desires and all that is left unsaid. By turns irreverent and deeply heartbreaking, Michalski masterfully constructs a collage of...


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Featured Reviews

I’ve never read or heard of the author before, but this collection looks intriguing, plus, at only about 200 pages, it didn’t require too much commitment to check out.
So…the surf-themed cover does nothing to prepare you for the book’s contents. These stories are heavy. Dark. Bleak. Overwhelmingly, they deal with some form of devastation as the emotionally hampered protagonists try to navigate their way through the minefields of existence.
And then, there are some quirky surreal tales in the mix…just because.
The overall effect is…well, not an easy read, but quality wise it is exceptional, with emotional intelligence dial set all the way up.
The stories here aren’t just slices of life, they actually slice…right to the bone. Reader beware.
But also, sometimes they are just sheer beauty, poetry in motion, stop and stare kind of thing.
While I never really remember the titles, my favorite was probably the one before the last one, with the last one being close to it. That sheer beauty thing on prominent display in those. Also, they were probably the lighter of the ones offered here, though with this collection light is relative. Oodles of LGBTQ+ characters but not exclusively. Just a good mix, like life ought to be. Even, of perhaps especially, one spent in the company of strangers.
Overall, not a sunny read but a very good one. Cautiously recommended to fans of literary fiction. Thanks Netgalley.

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In one of the stories in this marvelous collection, Alex, an actress, remarks that "The mind built the narrative one wanted, regardless of the facts," and goes on to suggest that she became an actress so that "she could be completely honest on her days off." These stories refuse that binary--they are unabashedly honest on their "days on," i.e. at their very core, whether they are simply narrating or performing, as some of them do. Some, more focused on the nuances of character, are teeming with sharp, striking observations, such about as the character who "always thought [they] would date someone who liked Tom Waits," who therefore "never listened to Tom Waits, figuring [their] eventual lover would fill[them] in on his essential gems..." So many of these stories are shadowed by absences and losses, sometimes declared right up front, such as in "The Club of the Missing," whose taut paragraphs might almost be stanzas, and others, such as "The Goodbye Party," which grapple with grief in the discomfort of what feels like real time. Some, like "The Bowling Story," play with the nature of storytelling itself, while others, like "I'm Such a Slut and I Don't Give a Fuck," do what only the best punk songs do--move so fast and cram so much in that they almost demand to be spun again, even while their searing final notes reverberate with a sustain pedal's tenacity. The last story, "Scheherazade," proves a fitting finale, as its evocation of that storytelling genius--itself given an unforgettable twist here--reminds us of what a range and plenitude of stories we've just imbibed.

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It has been some time since I have read stories that resonated in the way that the stories in this book did. There were just so many minute moments where I could just authentically feel the stories and feel the heart of the characters. I found this series of books to really be transformative and have depth that many authors cannot capture in an entire book. I definitely would be interested in reading more from this author. Thanks for the ARC, NetGalley.

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