



The Wonder Garden
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3.5 • 2 Ratings
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
“In 13 sharply drawn linked stories, Acampora reveals the complexities beneath the polish and privilege of a prosperous Connecticut town.”—People
A man strikes an under-the-table deal with a surgeon to spend a few quiet seconds closer to his wife than he’s ever been; a young soon-to-be mother looks on in paralyzing astonishment as her husband walks away from a twenty-year career in advertising at the urging of his spirit animal; an elderly artist risks more than he knows when he’s commissioned by his newly-arrived neighbors to produce the work of a lifetime.
In her stunning debut collection, The Wonder Garden, Lauren Acampora brings to the page with enchanting realism the myriad lives of a suburban town and lays them bare. These linked stories take a trenchant look at the flawed people of Old Cranbury, incisive tales that reveal at each turn the unseen battles we play out behind drawn blinds, the creeping truths from which we distract ourselves, and the massive dreams we haul quietly with us and hold close.
Deliciously creepy and masterfully complex The Wonder Garden heralds the arrival of a phenomenal new talent in American fiction.
“Like Wharton, Acampora seems to understand fiction as a kind of elegant design.”—The New York Times Book Review
“Acampora is a brilliant anthropologist of the suburbs . . . [The Wonder Garden] is reminiscent of John Cheever in its anatomizing of suburban ennui and of Ann Beattie in its bemused dissection of a colorful cast of eccentrics.”—Boston Globe
“Intelligent, unnerving, and very often strange . . . as irresistible as it is disturbing.”—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Acampora's debut creates a portrait of a fictional upscale Connecticut suburb, Old Cranbury, through a series of linked stories that are intelligent, unnerving, and very often strange. In "The Umbrella Bird," a woman eases into her new life as a housewife in a stuffy neighborhood only for her husband to trade his lucrative job for a career as a spiritual healer. In "The Virginals," a woman obsessed with the town's early American history resorts to criminal measures to preserve it. The book's best entry, "Afterglow," centers on a wealthy businessman who pays off a doctor in order to gain a troublingly intimate glimpse of his wife's anatomy. In each story, Acampora examines the tensions, longings, and mild lunacies underlying the "beady-eyed mommy culture" and sociopolitical "forgetfulness" marking Old Cranbury. At the same time, Acampora's picture of the town rendered in crisp prose and drawing on extensive architectural detail is as irresistible as it is disturbing. At one point, a resident of Old Cranbury feels as though "the air of this beautiful place... has begun to sear his individual cilia."