A collection of stories by the author of the widely acclaimed novel THE DANISH GIRL
From the author of THE DANISH GIRL comes David Ebershoff''s first collection of short fiction, THE ROSE CITY, seven finely crafted stories about young men finding a place in the world.
Set in contemporary California and Boston, the stories each recount a moment in their protagonist''s life when the world begins to shift beneath him: the boy who breaks into a gay man''s house to see how he lives; the shy teenager who tries to starve himself away; the tennis tutor who learns too much about the family for whom he works; the strange boy named Chuck Paa who finds employment among the dying. The title story is about an unemployed actor at the end of his youth whose life in Southern California is filled by delusion, and a perpetual search for love.
Industry Reviews
A well-honed but less-than-striking collection about discontented gay men caught between troubled childhoods, diminished lives, and the shifting winds of their uncertain futures. Whether the setting is Boston or Pasadena, the men and boys inhabiting the shrunken worlds of each of Ebershoff's seven tales have more in common than not. In "The Charm Bracelet," Billy is a high-school kid who likes to cruise at a nearby gay bar, but has yet to go beyond being flirtatious, sharing drinks, and taking phone numbers. A chance encounter with a frightened woman in a darkened park threatens to shine some reality into his life before he shuts it out again. The title story features Roland, a 48-year-old swelled to bursting with a sense of his own importance to the community. Watching men in the locker room of his athletic club, he "boiled a batch of distaste, one that would stay with him through the day." Like all of Ebershoff's men, Roland longs for much more than he could ever have and pays a dear price for all that attention focused elsewhere. Similarly, in "Tresspass," the book's spooky conclusion, the teenage narrator sleepwalks through his stunted life, suffused with dreams of what could and should be. Some of the stories, like the opener, "Chuck Paa," in which an acne-scarred home-health aide moves from one dying AIDS patient to another, cling to you with the intensity of their sadness and sense of limitation. But for all the assured and talented writing on display here, the refrain of themes-distant families, relentless hunting for something better, obsessions with physical perfection-and sameness of tone level out the collection's high points. Ebershoff ("The Danish Girl", 2000) strikes a chord over and again, sure to resonate like soulful music to some and clanking repetition to others. (Kirkus Reviews)