Bodies at Sea by Erin McGraw eBook

$7.99

In “Testimonial,”a young woman mordantly records the suicides occurring in her high- school classmates. “Every time I tell my mother she ruffles, squawks, refuses to let her tiny black eyes meet mine. She behaves every time as if it were unique, as if I weren’t attending funerals as regularly as a season ticket holder. She forgets them, cancels and excuses them, leaves me to keep track. Its eight now.”And here’s why: “It wasn’t for me to take headers from ten stories up or court trouble on dark city streets. Anyone could see that I was a keeper. I was the home front, the living testimony, the one they died for.”

And in “Until It Comes Closer,”a young woman, born without arms or legs as a result of her father’s exposure to Agent Orange in Vietnam, sets out with her sister to find true love. She succeeds, leaving her sister able bodied, free, and keenly alone for the first time in her life.

This volume, McGraw’s first, charts lives that are, as the title promises, at sea. Its characters feel alone even when they’re in clamorous rooms, and the choices they make are strange, sometimes frightening, and reminders of the full dangerous and dazzling potential of human existence. 

In “Testimonial,”a young woman mordantly records the suicides occurring in her high- school classmates. “Every time I tell my mother she ruffles, squawks, refuses to let her tiny black eyes meet mine. She behaves every time as if it were unique, as if I weren’t attending funerals as regularly as a season ticket holder. She forgets them, cancels and excuses them, leaves me to keep track. Its eight now.”And here’s why: “It wasn’t for me to take headers from ten stories up or court trouble on dark city streets. Anyone could see that I was a keeper. I was the home front, the living testimony, the one they died for.”

And in “Until It Comes Closer,”a young woman, born without arms or legs as a result of her father’s exposure to Agent Orange in Vietnam, sets out with her sister to find true love. She succeeds, leaving her sister able bodied, free, and keenly alone for the first time in her life.

This volume, McGraw’s first, charts lives that are, as the title promises, at sea. Its characters feel alone even when they’re in clamorous rooms, and the choices they make are strange, sometimes frightening, and reminders of the full dangerous and dazzling potential of human existence. 

“Carefully crafted, finely tuned, the 11 short stories in this collection often examine subtle shifts in family relationships.” – Publishers Weekly

“McGraw lifts up before our eyes hopes cases, the lame of heart and soul, and redeems them all with an eloquent and triumphant gaiety.” – Scott Russell Sanders

about the author

Author of Better Food for a Better World (2013), The Seamstress of Hollywood Boulevard (2008), The Good Life (2004), The Baby Tree (2002), Lies of the Saints (1996), and Bodies at Sea (1989). Author of short stories, personal essays, and essay-reviews on contemporary fiction. Stories in The Atlantic Monthly, Good Housekeeping, The Southern Review, The Georgia Review, The Kenyon Review, and other magazines. Personal essays in The Gettysburg Review, The Missouri Review, Image, and other magazines.