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In settings as different as Honolulu, Hawaii, small-town Minnesota, and Taxco, Mexico, these nine stories and a novella show blue-collar characters struggling to achieve the American Dream-and sometimes alienating friends and family as they try to upgrade their working-class pedigree. Anne Panning's people, despite their mixed record of success, make us root for them on their sometimes heartbreaking journeys of entrepreneurship, love, and loss.
In "Tidal Wave Wedding" a tsunami in Honolulu yields surprising results for a couple on their honeymoon. In "All-U-Can-Eat," a woman tries to stave off the investment of her inheritance into a restaurant specializing in frog legs. In the novella, "Freeze," a teenage son's future is forever complicated after a "life altering" accident confines his father to a wheelchair and accelerates the disintegration of his parents' marriage. An eerie clinical replay of another accident-this one on a bicycle in Hawaii-is at the center of "What Happened," and in the title story a college theater major gets caught up in his father's exotic pets scheme.
Panning's stories show an acute awareness of place, and-whether it be a seventeenth-century former-monastery in Mexico, a suburban housing development in Minnesota, or a hard-luck laundromat on the Oregon coast-each setting often tells us something about the characters who occupy them. Sometimes sad and often funny, Super America takes risks with our notions about the American Dream through characters caught between their working-class roots and grandiose visions.
In "Tidal Wave Wedding" a tsunami in Honolulu yields surprising results for a couple on their honeymoon. In "All-U-Can-Eat," a woman tries to stave off the investment of her inheritance into a restaurant specializing in frog legs. In the novella, "Freeze," a teenage son's future is forever complicated after a "life altering" accident confines his father to a wheelchair and accelerates the disintegration of his parents' marriage. An eerie clinical replay of another accident-this one on a bicycle in Hawaii-is at the center of "What Happened," and in the title story a college theater major gets caught up in his father's exotic pets scheme.
Panning's stories show an acute awareness of place, and-whether it be a seventeenth-century former-monastery in Mexico, a suburban housing development in Minnesota, or a hard-luck laundromat on the Oregon coast-each setting often tells us something about the characters who occupy them. Sometimes sad and often funny, Super America takes risks with our notions about the American Dream through characters caught between their working-class roots and grandiose visions.
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Reviews
"Anne Panning is a breath of fresh air in the often overly solemn land of the American short story. I love her sense of humor, the wit and verve of her stories, which nevertheless always show real compassion for the complex lives and struggles of ordinary people. Her stories are a real delight."
Dan Chaon, author of You Remind Me of Me
"There is talent and insight at work throughout this collection, which won the Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction; each tale is marked by a polished, meditative narrative, rich detail and emotional impact."
Justin Cronin, author of The Summer Guest
"Family dynamics in all their messy complexity set a wealth of material before the gimlet eye of Anne Panning. . . . Panning writes with intelligence and humor, as well as a grasp of craft justly acknowledged here with the imprimatur of the Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction."
Boston Sunday Globe