Subcortical
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- $24.99
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- $24.99
Publisher Description
The off-balance and lively characters in Subcortical use braininess and grit in their attempts to navigate beyond the borders of their homes and histories.
Winner of the Story Prize Spotlight Award of The Story PrizeWinner of the Short Fiction Award of the American Book FestBronze Book Award Short Story Fiction of the Independent Publisher
Recipient of the 2018 Story Prize Spotlight Award
Lee Conell’s linguistically deft stories examine the permeability between the real and the imagined, the stories buried beneath the surface and the stories by which we live our lives.
In the title story of this collection, a young woman who wants to become a doctor is manipulated by an older man into playing a role in one of his medical studies. In "The Lock Factory," winner of the Chicago Tribune’s 2016 Nelson Algren Literary Award, three women who assemble school combination locks are trapped inside an escalating generational conflict of their own making. A boy who has lost his mother in "The Rent-Controlled Ghost" searches for the spirit of the mistreated tenant who formerly inhabited his apartment. "A Magic Trick for the Recently Unemployed" serves as a three-step how-to guide for reclaiming a sense of self and purpose. In "What the Blob Said to Me," an elderly woman dwells on her long-ago experience working at a government production site for the atomic bomb. And a mother-daughter Groupon for an upscale afternoon tea goes seriously awry in "Mutant at the Pierre Hotel."
With humor and verve, Subcortical’s dynamic stories delve into the mysteries of the human mind as these haunted characters struggle with economic disparity, educational divides, and the often-contested spaces in which they live.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Conell brings the characters in her rich debut collection to life in weird, wise, and often poignant ways. In the title story, a young woman begins an affair with a married doctor who dreams of curing homosexuality, and she becomes complicit in his experiments to turn a young gay man straight, even as she increasingly identifies with the doctor's patient. "What the Blob Said to Me" recounts the experience of a woman who long ago assisted in the building of the atomic bomb; looking back, she regrets not the lives lost due to the bomb, but instead the fate of a young colleague to whom she had been cruel. And in "The Lock Factory," the narrator recounts her mother's experience working a summer job and an intergenerational conflict that developed between two coworkers. This story is a surprisingly moving portrait of three generations of women that demonstrates how difficult it is to escape the places that make people who they are. Throughout the collection, the characters' interior and exterior lives are often in striking conflict, and in this juxtaposition, Conell maps the emotional landscape of people on the periphery who have been waiting to be recognized.