Kirkus Reviews
Joint winner of the 2006 John Simmons Short
Fiction Award, this collection piercingly depicts idiosyncratic perspectives.
Moffett's delicately perceptive stories, several
set in Florida's beach communities and retirement homes, share with
the reader the characters' most private inner dialogues. In "Tattooizm,"
Andrea, currently dating aspiring tattoo artist Dixon, is already
mentally rehearsing how to describe Dixon to the boyfriend she imagines
being with next. In "The Gardener of Eden," Evan mourns
with aching intensity the death of one of his employees, a woman with
whom he has experienced a brief affair. A strain of offbeat humor
permeates the writing, as in "Ursa, on Zoo Property and Off,"
which follows an office outing during which both animal and human
modes of interaction are laid bare. Whether the mood is serious or
comic, Moffett's beady observation supplements the work with telling
detail: a set of tooth braces ("A Statement of Purpose");
a slice of red-velvet cake, imperiously ordered and never eaten ("The
Volunteer's Friend"). Moffett's stories span the arc of life-marriage,
sex, pregnancy, family, disease, death-and in doing so, they imagine
individuals in all their lonely specialness, with insights to match,
such as Ray's ("Space"), as he contemplates his mother's
death: "While her absence made the hole, her absence was also
what came later to fill it."
Low-key yet sharp stories, etched with a humane
vision.