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Why Visit America
Why Visit America: Stories | Matthew Baker
2 posts | 2 read | 3 to read
Equal parts speculative and satirical, the stories in Why Visit America form an exegesis of our current political predicament, while offering an eloquent plea for connection and hope. The citizens of Plainfield, Texas, have had it with the broke-down United States. So they vote to secede, rename themselves America in memory of their former country, and happily set themselves up to receive tourists from their closest neighbor: America. Couldn’t happen? Well, it might, and so it goes in the thirteen stories in Matthew Baker’s brilliantly illuminating, incisive, and heartbreaking collection Why Visit America. The book opens with a seemingly traditional story in which the speculative element is extremely minimal—the narrator has a job that doesn’t actually exist—a story that wouldn’t seem much out of place in a collection of literary realism. From there the stories get progressively stranger: a young man breaks the news to his family that he is going to transition—from an analog body to a digital existence. A young woman abducts a child—her own—from a government-run childcare facility. A man returns home after committing a great crime, his sentence being that his memory—his entire life—is wiped clean. As the book moves from universe to universe, the stories cross between different American genres: from bildungsroman to rom com, western to dystopian, including fantasy, horror, erotica, and a noir detective mystery. Read together, these parallel-universe stories create a composite portrait of the true nature of the United States and a Through the Looking-Glass reflection of who we are as a country.
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review
The_Book_Ninja
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Bailedbailed

I imagine this book divides readers. Most of Baker‘s prose is easy rolling & engaging but is let down by Batemanesque lists that really interrupt his, otherwise, fluid story telling The stories are sci-fi leaning metaphors with capitalism, consumerism, identity, gender, ageism & family among the many constructs squeezed in to tales that start off compelling but end up with unsatisfying endings. I bailed because I like an old fashioned denouement.

review
Oryx
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Pickpick

Short stories are generally hit or miss for me (mostly miss, unless it's Roald Dahl or Stephen King - I'd read their short stories all day). But this was pretty good - it looks at issues like consumerism, sexism, old age, nationalism in a really imaginative way. Not every story worked for me, but it had a good hit rate. Plus this cover is right up my street. Apparently several stories have been optioned for tv/film.

Reggie Sounds good! 4y
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