Esther StoriesTHE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW, NOVEMBER, 2001: The skillful deployment of history and geography has much to do with the success of "Esther Stories," but all would be in vain were it not for Orner's mastery of language. He moves, seemingly effortlessly, between plain speech and more elevated diction, between short, flat sentences and sinuous, long ones. Consider this description of the sea captain and his wife after the girl, a teenager hired to help with the cleaning, carves her initials in their table. "Yet over the longer years--when the fish became scarcer, when they'd long since failed their vow to fill that house with children, when the silences between them sometimes lasted hours, when the captain's wife no longer paced the house, waiting for him, or word of him--an odd thing. They still talked about the letters." Best of all, Orner is a true democrat. Most of his characters struggle to hang onto even one of the fundamental rights--life, love, the pursuit of happiness--but every character, young or old, well-to-do or broke, maimed or whole, is worthy of the author's insight and eloquence. Walt and Sarah Kaplan, the protagonists of the third section, ''Fall River Marriage,'' are two excellent examples of this generosity of spirit. The owners of Kaplan's Furniture Store, they are overweight, talkative to the point of garrulity, not particularly well educated. Their lives have been somewhat constricted (they eloped to Providence when Sarah was 18 and their daughter was born six months later), but they emerge in these 11 stories as radiant, complex and heartbreaking. Separately and together, we see them during their long -- but not sufficiently long -- marriage: spending a day at the beach, watching the demolition of Walt's store, celebrating their daughter's wedding, talking to old friends. The section ends not with the poignant, single-paragraph story of Walt's fatal heart attack but with the couple's exuberant elopement. When the young Walt pulls up outside Sarah's house, she seems to have changed her mind. ''She doesn't bother to shake her head and certainly doesn't need to use her voice to say no again. Her face: Never, never, never, never, never.'' He stares at her desperately, taking in her lipstick, her hat and her knees, ''fat little knees he could eat without mustard,'' until at last Sarah gives in (''Awright already'') and they are on their way. As he drives her toward the justice of the peace, Walt thinks: ''Hasta Luego, woods by the Watupa! Ciao, blankets and trees! A bed, a bed, a bed, a bed, a bed, a bed, a bed, a bed, a bed.'' Neither here nor elsewhere does Orner offer a single narrative of cause and effect. Indeed, all the evidence suggests that he doesn't believe such a narrative is possible, that he is convinced that life can only be understood and represented in sidelong glances. But through these glances emerges something brooding, mysterious, ineffable, beautiful. At any moment, we have the feeling, everything might become clear. We keep listening for the voices in the walls. - Margot Livesey, The New York Times Book Review A spirit of passionate tenderness broods over these stories. It is as if love, transcending itself, has become a wisdom so perfect it must cherish everything--grace, of course, and awkwardness too, and innocence, and guilt, and haplessness. And yes, clear-sighted and unhonored loss. - Marilynne Robinson THE WASHINGTON POST There's startling intimacy in every story of Peter Orner's debut collection, Esther Stories, startling because of the immediacy with which Orner's characters confront us and because of the range of feelings they express and the secrets they reveal. Coming at a time when too many novels and stories by young writers foreground irony and little else, Orner's brave assault on emotional ennui is a welcome change. - The Washington Post THE LOS ANGELES TIMES In "Shoe Story," one of the shortest and most dangerous in Peter Orner's shotgun collection, two guys are having burgers and talking about love when the couple upstairs starts fighting. "Then she winged her shoes at him. I know this because Cal and I were sitting there listening, wiping our hands on our pants--Ike's got no napkins--when two white shoes dropped into the street like tiny planes crash-landing....They lay sprawled on the pavement, toe to toe, linked in the agony of the fall." You can see why the stories might be dangerous. They are sharp and frequently without mercy. Lives often boil down to a pile of clothes or worse,explode in the sudden violence of long-repressed pain. "Thumbs" is a good example of the kinds of pain that can lead a high school boy to kill a teacher. The stories build on each other, as if the characters from one story could hear the characters from another yelling through the thin walls of an apartment complex. The Los Angeles Times, Susan Salter Reynolds |
Esther Stories
"A spirit of passionate tenderness broods over these stories. It is as if love, transcending itself, has become a wisdom so perfect it must cherish everything--grace, of course, and awkwardness too, and innocence, and guilt, and haplessness. And yes, clear-sighted and unhonored loss." -- Marilynne Robinson
Underground America: Narratives of Undocumented Lives
A vivid, personal, often wrenching and occasionally enraging first-person look into the immigrant experience, what editor and novelist Orner calls a "state of permanent anxiety." -- Publisher's Weekly Starred Review
Magazines and Anthologies
Orner's work has appeared in the Atlantic Monthly, the Paris Review, Granta, McSweeney's, The Southern Review as well in Best American Stories, has won two Pushcart Prizes, and appeared in a number of anthologies. |