cover image WATER OF AN UNDETERMINED DEPTH

WATER OF AN UNDETERMINED DEPTH

Richard Chiappone, . . Stackpole, $19.95 (144pp) ISBN 978-0-8117-0033-7

Blue-collar men and women navigate the great outdoors and the tighter confines of personal relationships in this debut collection of 14 well-crafted stories. In "The Chubs," a college student goes fishing with his father, a factory worker, and comes away with silent permission to follow his own path in life. "Side Job" offers another take on the demands of blue-collar life when a man takes a plumbing job against his better judgment rather than track down his family's escaped canine. "A Girl, the Jungle, Monkeys," a wryly humorous tale about a widower on a vacation in the tropics, takes an alarming turn when the protagonist is attacked by insects and stranded, delirious, in an out-of-the-way village. The title story is a brief gem about a father who worries obsessively about accidents, running through a list of gruesome news stories when his teenage daughter requests permission to go swimming at a local quarry and finally recalling the tragic end of one of his own childhood best friends. Chiappone's succinct, almost abrupt narrative style cuts sharply to the chase, but his spare prose never limits his ability to layer ideas and conceits. Not all of the stories are successful—occasionally the male blue-collar protagonists seem interchangeable, and some of the outdoor material is equally repetitive. But Chiappone's ironic humor differentiates this collection, and his strong voice bodes well for subsequent efforts. (Jan.)