cover image Uranians

Uranians

Theodore McCombs. Astra House, $25 (224p) ISBN 978-1-66260-194-1

McCombs weaves science and fantasy in his playful and provocative debut collection. In the opener, “Toward a Theory of Alternative Lifestyles,” the narrator reflects on a prior relationship in terms of quantum mechanics (“if it’s true that... every possible version of you exists somewhere... in at least one of those realities... you got everything you ever wanted, and were loved as much as you loved”). In “Lacuna Heights,” set in a near-future San Francisco where the beaches are gone and people wear Wi-Fi glasses, a lawyer begins to disassociate as he questions his marriage. “Six Hangings in the Land of Unkillable Women” counterpoints brief accounts of 1909 executions with the grim dystopian mission of a police superintendent’s wife to bring back public hangings. The main event is the glorious novella “Uranians,” which takes its name from a Victorian term for queer people. Somewhere in space, the opera La Traviata is performed on a spaceship, its motley mix of passengers on a mission to study other planets. On board, a trans priest lusts after a “power lesbian” doctor. Though not all of the concepts take off, McCombs’s mix of heart and zany ideas is often reminiscent of George Saunders. Readers will find plenty of earthy and unearthly delights. Agent: Kirby Kim, Janklow & Nesbit Assoc. (May)