About the Book:
Title:
You Won’t Remember This
Author: Kate Blackwell
Publisher: Bacon Press Books
Pages: 232
Genre: Short Stories/Southern Fiction
Format: Kindle
Author: Kate Blackwell
Publisher: Bacon Press Books
Pages: 232
Genre: Short Stories/Southern Fiction
Format: Kindle
The twelve
stories in Kate Blackwell’s debut collection illuminate the lives of men and
women who appear as unremarkable as your next-door-neighbor until their lives
explode quietly on the page. Her wry, often darkly funny voice describes the
repressed underside of a range of middle-class characters living in the South.
Blackwell’s focus is elemental—on marriage, birth, death, and the entanglements
of love at all ages—but her gift is to shine a light on these universal
situations with such lucidity, it is as if one has never seen them before.
For More Information
- You Won’t Remember This
is available at Amazon.
- Purchase book at Bacon Press Books.
- Discuss this book at PUYB
Virtual Book Club at Goodreads.
- Read excerpt here.
Carpe
Diem
The "shadow line," Kurt
calls it. Carroll believes he is referring to age, to some transitional moment
into old age. But what moment exactly? When we are too old to make love? Too
tired to feel desire? Kurt shrugs. When our hopes are extinguished? When I'll
never see you again? What line are you talking about, Kurt?
Kurt is almost fifty but looks
younger. His hair is a dark silky brown. His skin is smooth. There is a
youthful leprechaun quality about him, though he is beginning to have a paunch
about the belly. He does not get enough exercise. If he could ski regularly, he
says, he would lose that flab. Kurt is an expert skier. He learned to ski when
he was five, in Germany .
When he was eleven, he had a terrible accident that broke both legs below the
knee. The fractured fibulas erupted through flesh and skin. Carroll, drawing
her finger along the deep scars on Kurt's calves, tries to envision the
accident, the broken skis, the bloodied snow, the boy lying there in the snow,
waiting for someone to come.
But she has a hard time picturing
Kurt as a boy. Sometimes she has a hard time remembering what he looks like
now. Though they have been together for nearly two years, loosely speaking—she
has her own place, he has his—they really do not see that much of each other.
Kurt is a free-lance photographer and is often traveling. Benin . Djibouti . Sucre . Carroll, too, is
busy. She owns and runs a nursery school called Sunshine Day for three- and
four-year-olds. Sometimes months go by when Carroll and Kurt do not see each
other, though sometimes, out of the blue, he will call from some distant place.
She will hear his voice, high-pitched and tentative, a as if he did not expect
her to answer (or perhaps it’s the connection that makes it sound that way?)—Hello? Remember me?—and she feels such
happiness it terrifies her. Does he actually believe she has forgotten him?
And yet, in certain ways, she does
forget. Today, standing in her school yard among all the small revved-up bodies
and high yelling voices, sniffing the odors of sand and lilac, she tries to
conjure his face. She knows his eyes are green, his nose small and sharp, his
skin lightly freckled. But she cannot visualize his mouth or the curve of his
cheek or his expression when he looks at her. She cannot remember his voice.
She expects to hear that voice, though, perhaps in a few hours. Kurt is due
back today from Mali .
Or is it Niger ?
The prospect of seeing him makes her giddy. He has been away nearly two months.
Even so, even in the midst of her excitement, she can't help asking herself
where this relationship is going. The question occurs to her all the time, but
whenever she alludes to the future—an off-hand reference to season tickets for
the opera or a time-share deal on a beach house—Kurt shakes his head.
"Carpe diem," he says, in
his lightly accented speech.
About the Author
KATE BLACKWELL
worked as a journalist and editor before turning full-time to fiction. Her
first collection, YOU
WON’T REMEMBER THIS, was published in hardback in 2007 by Southern
Methodist University Press. Her stories have appeared in numerous
journals, including Agni,
Prairie Schooner, New Letters, Carve, The Literary Review, The Greensboro Review, Sojourner, and So To Speak. She lives in Washington , DC .
For More Information
- Visit Kate Blackwell’s website.
- Connect with Kate on Facebook.
- Find out more about Kate
at Goodreads.
- Contact Kate.
My Review:
I just finished reading "You Won't Remember This" by author Kate Blackwell and I really liked the twelve different stories in this anthology. These are stories filled with people that while you are reading about them you think that you may know someone like them. The storylines are great and I liked the characters. I give these stories a 4/5. I was given this book for the purpose of a review and all opinions are mine.
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