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I love short stories and short fiction. I love how concise the stories are and how I can finish one while waiting for the dentist or before bed. My love affair with short stories started in college and I'm convinced I would not have survived without Lorrie Moore and Elizabeth Crane.
Midge Raymond's collection of short stories in Forgetting English reads like a travelogue or private diary. Nearly all of the stories take place outside of the United States (though a couple do take place in Maui). Raymond's stories take the reader to exotic places like the Kingdom of Tonga (I totally had to look that up. It is in the South Pacific in case you were wondering), Antarctica, Taipei, Tokyo, and Tanzania. Infidelity is a common theme in many of her stories like "The Road to Hana," "Rest of World," "First Sunday," and "Beyond the Kopjes." Despite the loss of love, the stories are still full of hope. Raymond's characters treat it as a minor inconvenience like a missed flight.
"First Sunday" is probably my favorite of all of the stories (though "Never Turn Your Back on the Ocean" is a close second, probably because I was just in Wailea). Melanie comes to Tonga to see her older sister and recover from her recent termination. While on the island she begins an affair with a young islander named Sione who is engaged to a woman in the village. What I liked most about "First Sunday" was not my immersion into Tongan culture but how her prose starts with a bang. It is the first story in the collection and begins,
He lives in his mother's house, with no electricity or hot water, yet somehow he always has a ready supply of condoms.
How can you not be hooked with an opening line like that? All you can do is hope that this story and the rest of the collection is on par, which it is. All of her stories are heartbreakingly honest.
Forgetting English recently received the Spokane Prize for Short Fiction. Raymond's work has appeared in American Literary Review, Ontario Review, Indiana Review, North American Review, the Los Angeles Times, and other publications. She currently lives and writes in Seattle and teaches at the Richard Hugo House. I wouldn't be surprised if she started getting compared to Alice Munroe or Jumpa Lahiri.
My only complaint was that the collection was so small. The eight stories were not enough to leave me satisfied. I finished the last one and was at a loss. You don't want them to end, they are that engrossing. The book is available at most local bookstores and at the Seattle Public Library.











Comments
I loved every story in this collection, although the one that takes place in Antarctica stuck with me the most. I also loved the story of the young woman teaching English in China (I think it was China; I read this a few months ago). I'm amazed that one author can come up with all these different stories. I wish she'd write a novel next.
I also loved the collection. My favorite was "Translation Memory," where a couple goes to Japan, the husband for business and the wife in grief over a recent abortion. The way the author swings back and forth between business speak and soul-searching is seamless and beautiful. The stories read quickly but the metaphors make you stop and think. A great collection for book clubs. I found reading questions on the author's website.
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