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Call Up the Waters

Stories

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A magnetic debut collection of stories about the daily lives and labors of girls and women in rural America.

In Call Up the Waters, the natural world is an escape hatch, a refuge, a site of work, and an occasional antagonist. In the title story, a devastating drought leads a mother of two deep into the Colorado Rockies in search of water. In “The Handler,” a woman leaves her boyfriend for the New Hampshire woods and fifty-seven sled dogs. A distress call from a boat in Massachusetts Bay compels a mother, in “Sea Women,” to plumb her daughter’s secrets. A girl torn between truth and expectation shows her courage in a funereal performance in “Barn Burning.” And in “Bending the Map,” a woman turns the tables on her obsessive, would-be lover after a powerful storm ravages her canyon home.

The characters in these ten stories—search-and-rescue workers, dog trainers, naturalists, archaeologists, and dowsers—are each fundamentally shaped by the environment in which they live and work. They seek meaning through labor, connection through jobs. But in that searching they often find themselves far from their destination. Familiar landscapes suddenly feel strange. Unfamiliar spaces offer something like hope. Off the map and off the grid, these characters, and their regrets and devotions, are nevertheless immediately, intimately recognizable.

Sharply observant but steadily elegant, textured with empathy and grit, Call Up the Waters marks the arrival of a remarkable new talent.

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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 3, 2023
      Caron’s assured debut collection explores humanity’s relationship with the natural world. Throughout, the environment looms as both a comfort and a threat. “Bending the Map,” a standout, unspools with a strong sense of foreboding as a California woman turns to her neighbor for shelter after losing her cabin to a flood. In the title story, a man remembers the harsh drought that led his mother to start dowsing at their rural home in Colorado, a practice the narrator mocked by mimicking her in front of his friends. Despite this act of ridicule, he admits that as a child he feared his mother would bring about a catastrophic flood. “Shovelbums,” told through a series of vignettes, follows the lives of workers cataloging and preserving historic sites in Yuma, Ariz., and other places. In “What the Birds Knew,” another highlight, a man recounts taking his six-year-old daughter on a trip to Kauai from New England, despite her fever from an infection he neglects to treat, which results in hearing loss. These stories provide strong and varied impressions of characters on the margins.

    • Kirkus

      May 1, 2023
      Ten stories that paint vivid characters in emotionally resonant moments. The short stories in this collection often describe dramatic events--a cabin washed away; a boy dead in a fire--but they center subtleties of emotional life. Racial diversity isn't explicit, and apart from mentions of a migrant family, character descriptions don't suggest it. But the stories feature a welcome range of economic backgrounds: a wealthy father who uses his money to assuage a personal sense of guilt; a girl whose family can't quite scrape together $1.50 for a plastic razor. Throughout the collection, we encounter characters through details that don't coalesce into revelation or diagnosis. A mother's fixation with divining rods sends her wandering canyons at night; she embraces trees because it "chases away bad thoughts"; and her knitting basket is full of unfinished projects. But we don't know why she is like this, what a name for it might be. In the poignant final story, a woman struggles to reconcile everything she knows about her niece--her watchful demeanor, the way she picks at her food, the trouble she causes her parents--and comes up short. "Do you want to know where she was, what she was doing? (She will refuse to say.)" This willingness to describe without arriving at answers might frustrate readers accustomed to short stories that end with a flourish of insight or irony. But the achievement of these stories has more to do with emotional movement than a point of arrival. This approach creates a sense of depth and realism: These characters exist beyond the moments the text describes; their world is not restricted to a story arc. A collection that patiently renders emotional depth without recourse to angst or melodrama.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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