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Sex Romp Gone Wrong

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In her debut story collection, Julia Ridley Smith navigates the currents and eddies of desire, sex, love, and relationships.

These twelve highly accomplished stories are witty and accessible, intelligent and thought-provoking. A girls' week at the beach prompts hot tub drinking, awkward confessions, and a poignant reconsideration of friendship. A caregiver extracts a small repayment from her elderly patient for his long-forgotten role in the demise of her family. A young woman, new to New York City, finds herself in a complex but tacky love affair and reckons with the unfolding plot of her life. In the title story, a woman plots to conceive a second child while at a convention hotel with her husband and teenage daughter, both of whom have other plans. Smith's stories will beguile and delight readers while at the same time exploring the deep and often difficult ties of family, marriage, and romantic love in modern life.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 15, 2024
      Smith’s savvy debut collection captures women navigating friendships, love, and desire. The narrator of “Don’t Breathe, Breathe” goes directly from a mammogram appointment to a friend’s 50th birthday bash at a beach house on the North Carolina coast, where the group’s alcohol-fueled banter leads to painful reckonings about consent and personal responsibility as they look back on their younger years. In “Cleopatra’s Needle,” a 20-something woman mentally escapes her dead-end office job and dead-end relationship with an older married man by contemplating alternate story lines for herself, such as a torrid affair with a brash, age-appropriate co-worker. Some of the more experimental entries wobble in comparison to the more traditional fare (the narrator of “Tooth” is surprised to find a tooth in her mouth that isn’t her own), but Smith expertly captures the cadence of her protagonists’ conversations, and she nails their often affluent, mostly white milieu: “Bottles lined the countertop like warheads—white, pink, red; vodka, gin, bourbon—a liquid arsenal against the onslaught of age.” Smith exhibits a keen perception in her well-crafted stories.

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Languages

  • English

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