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Book Review: Days of Awe

Madeleine Kingsley enjoys a slice of contemporary American fiction

August 22, 2018 12:44
A_M_Homes_by_David_Shankbone
2 min read

If you are not kept awake at night by A M Homes’s transgressive imagination, it will certainly have you reading past bedtime. Days of Awe, her new short-story collection, puts a surreal slant on everyday America and celebrates the psyche at its most bizarre: welcome to the dark, plastic places behind Disneyland, the restaurant that serves ten-calorie dishes, and the internet chat-room for budgerigar devotees.

Homes’s characters trawl their superficial world seeking meaning and repair. In The Last Good Time, a man revisits the world of Mickey Mouse, hoping to recapture the childhood wonder of the spinning teacups. Now, he sees queues for every ride and “Made in China” labels on the snow globes.

In Brother on Sunday, a fashionable cosmetic surgeon ponders his brief spell with a mercy medical mission as “a kind of spiritual recompense for the fortune that modern elective cosmetic procedures had brought”.

A Prize for Every Player is a satire on competitive shopping, in which a family turns the grocery shop into an off-screen game show with prizes for the most items piled high in the supermarket trolley and bonus points for anything on sale or covered by coupons. They leave the store with an unexpected extra — a baby left on top of the towels on Aisle Nine.

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