Ratings1
Average rating3.5
A gorgeously wrought exploration of what it means to exist in the in-between. In her debut short-story collection A Small Apocalypse, Laura Chow Reeve examines cultural inheritance, hybridity, queerness, and the stickiness of home with an eye for both the uncanny and the realistic: human bodies become reptilian, queer ghosts haunt their friends, a young woman learns to pickle memories, and a theater floods during an apocalyptic movie marathon. The characters in A Small Apocalypse weave in and out of its fourteen stories, confronting their sense of otherness and struggling to find new ways of being and belonging. Heavily steeped in the swampy, feral heat of Florida, these stories venture beyond the problems of constructing an identity to the frontier of characters living their truth in a world that doesn’t yet have a place for them.
Reviews with the most likes.
A Small Apocalypse - Laura Chow Reeve 3,5*
Thank you to NetGalley for allowing me to read this.
This collection got off on a rough start for me. Thankfully it didn’t stay that way. Most of the stories focus race, grief, gender, sexuality, mental health, friendship and family relationships. Overall I am happy I read this, but wouldn’t feel inclined to read it again.
Milked Snakes: 2*
Milked Snakes follows a woman who is transforming into a reptile. This story didnt make a lot of sense to me. Having such a strange thing happen to you and just staying calm, acting like it’s as mundane as going grocery shopping or doing laundry... It is nice that it is a story about finding your people, but it was too vague for me.
Rebecca: 3*
This story is about Grace who takes a plane and finally meets her online boyfriend for the first time. But he is not really the reason she came there. I liked this story more and Reeve’s writing is enjoyable. Yet this story also felt unfinished. There are hints as to what it’s about, but then the next page shows a new story.
One-Thousand-Year-Old-Ghosts: 4,5*
For the third story in this book we follow Katie who is a second generation immigrant. Her grandmother has taught her the art of physically botteling up her negative memories to forget them.
’I clogged every drain in the house to create space to put myself away.’
This was a very creative story. I love a complicated family dynamic and an emphasis on the importance of memory.
The lay-out and structure of this text was also well thought out.
Real Bodies: 4,5*
Next we follow a Chinese-American woman who lives in an America that forces people to go on constant dates. Forcing the entire population to only embrace straight and white relationships and keeping track of all to ensure that they do.
This haunting story is not far removed from our reality and shows readers that allowing people to be free in who they are will always be the most important.
’Beauty is just enough white to soften the rough edges.’
Suwannee: 4*
Suwannee focusses on queer friendship and the solid bonds that groups of people can form. Two characters from an earlier story appear in this one, creating a timeline throughout some of the stories. There is a romance storyline as well, though the focus is on friendship with it-s strentghs and weaknesses.
Hunted: 3*
This one was very short. All I have to say is that it is the epitome of self love.
Happiest: 3*
Family and grief take focus in this story. The dynamics between the family members are clear and it feels like something that could have actually happened. I would have loved a longer version of this.
A Small Apocalypse: 4*
Grief, growing pains and your place in the world are all themes in this short story. It has a clear character and is enjoyable to read.
Paper Wasps: 4*
Lily, who has something along the lines of OCD, keep disappearing into her obsessions. It is a good representation of the ebbs and flows of depression.
Beloved Flamingo Stoned to Death: 3*
Lou works at a zoo and feels a kinship with one of the flamingoes who ends up as described in the title. It focusses on grief and has an interesting point of view.
Upstairs: 3*
This story reminds me of the start of ‘Beau Is Afraid’, which is a movie I hated. Though it is always interesting when a character doesn’t know what is and isn’t real.
Three-card Spread: 4,5*
I really liked this one. It’s main focus was family dynamics (parents and children) and how we are influences by them, whether we want it or not.
Migratory Patterns: 4*
In my opinion, the collection should have ended with this story creating a full circle moment. I liked that we got to follow some of the same characters throughout the book and this way we got some closure on them.
A Packing List for the End of the World: 3*
This is interesting after having read The Road. However, it is very short and feels like it doesn’t really a point and quite random at the end of the collection.