(8/6/2023)
The common bond in this impressive collection of ten thought-provoking short stories is communication; as characters try to connect with others. Adult, teen, and child narrators offer a range of experiences and perspectives; some of these naïve, unreliable or flawed. In "You Are Not Alone", a new wife who has left her family in Brazil, contemplates the challenge of becoming a stepmother: "She will have to learn how to speak to a young girl in a language that isn't her own, she will have to learn motherhood." (p90)
Not all of the stories worked for me; but the ones that I found most memorable offered nuance, insight, and hope. Vara writes beautifully, and packs a good deal of character development; message and meaning into these short tales. Her work is perceptive and balanced; though I especially appreciated her female characters; some flawed, some fearful or feisty. I also delighted in the appreciation of print encyclopedias in "Sibyls"; and the comfort reading together brings mother and child in "Puppet Master Made the Puppets".