cover image After the Funeral and Other Stories

After the Funeral and Other Stories

Tessa Hadley. Knopf, $28 (240p) ISBN 978-0-593-53619-3

Hadley (Free Love) proves herself a magician of short fiction with this wonderful collection featuring characters whose epiphanies shift their conception of their lives. Many of the stories feature POV switches, coincidental encounters, and other literary devices that might not have worked if Hadley weren’t so good at capturing moments of startling strangeness. In “Cecelia Awakened,” a teenager travels with her parents to Florence, Italy, where she realizes they’re simply tourists—at once outlandish and utterly unoriginal. While checking into their hotel, she picks up a flash of disdain from the manager directed at her father (“It was as if Cecelia had heard distinctly, in a moment when no one else was actually speaking, [an] idle thought: Fussy little man”). In “Dido’s Lament,” a Londoner named Lynette quite literally bumps into her ex-husband, Toby, on the subway. A power play ensues when Toby invites Lynette to visit his new house. After Lynette leaves, Hadley shifts to Toby’s perspective, where in his shame he has an unsettling thought about his new family and success. “The Other One” follows a girl whose grief over her father’s death via car accident becomes complicated when it comes out that he was driving with his mistress and her female friend. Many years later, at a dinner party, the girl (now a woman) believes she has bumped into the mistress’s friend, the eponymous “other one,” toward whom she feels oddly warm. Readers will marvel over these twisty and masterly tales. (July)