Publisher’s Weekly
Starred Review
Chacon, winner of the 2007 Hudson Prize for Unending
Rooms, returns with a collection of short fiction concerned with American and
Mexican relations in which a world of race and identity politics emerges.
Linked but never repetitive, these beautiful stories are fresh, with just
enough Borges-ian magic to make them feel extraordinary. The specter of
Juarez's problems is at the forefront, and Chacon references everything from
fascist dictators to Harold and the Purple Crayon. Some characters spill into
other stories, others vanish without resolution. A library in "Birds"
becomes the entire world for a couple that doesn't know each other's names, and
Joseph, a recurring figure, buys a book of poetry to take on the feminine voice
as protection in Juarez, where drug dealers, as in the story "14",
appear in the guise of old men interested in tortas. The young girl in
"Tasty Chicken" is afraid that glitter will infect her, while in
"Sabado Gigante", Bruno, despite his large size, is more interested
in playing with dolls than playing sports. From drug trafficking to murdered
and missing women, Chacon addresses major issues without feeling preachy or
heavy-handed. The stories are rooms, images that you can walk into, taking the
reader to wherever Chacon wants him to go.

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