Flint Kill Creek Stories
of Mystery and Suspense by Joyce
Carol Oates Mysterious
Press, 2024 Joyce Carol Oates’ latest collection, Flint Kill Creek:
Stories of Mystery and Suspense, is a masterpiece of the macabre. Its twelve
tales, which the publisher tells us have been “reformulated”—perhaps meaning
they have been revised from their original publications—deal with meaty
issues: loneliness, envy, and fear are the most prevalent. “The Phlebotomist,”
about a confused and timid woman drawn into an uncomfortable conversation
with the male phlebotomist that helped draw her blood, is as troubling and
dark as any tale I’ve read. An ambiguous ending acts only to amplify its foreboding. “Weekday” follows a distracted father driving
to work; worrying about the list of errands his wife assigned to him that
morning and all but forgetting about his toddler daughter in the backseat.
There is no doubt where it will end, but the journey is a harrowing (and
worthwhile) ride into the frenzied shadows of modern parenting. “Friend of My
Heart,” about a dissatisfied adjunct professor meeting a far more successful former
classmate, is a bitter pill of loneliness, betrayal, and envy. And that
ending—well, read it and you’ll know. “Bone Marrow Donor” is a macabre tale
about fear and medical hope. It reads with the abstract delirium of a drug-induced
high. “The Nice Girl” is about a young high
school graduate—the type of girl that always does the right thing—overshadowed
by her mentally ill and addicted older sister. The tale’s jagged edges cut
the reader a thousand times before its images settle into memory. “Happy
Christmas” is a razor-sharp story about family, love, and loneliness. The
dark secrets it reveals make the story linger in the reader’s mind long past the
final word. “Late Love,” which is my favorite story in the collection, is a marvelous
play on love and sanity. The narrator is unreliable and every word is precise
and perfect. Flint Kill Creek is a brilliant
collection. It should appeal to fans of Joyce Carol Oates and anyone else
with a humanist bent and an eye for the phantasm of gothic hallucinatory realism. |
Check out Flint Kill Creek on Amazon: Kindle edition
here and hardcover here. |
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