FICTION
- Share via
LITHUANIA by Joe Ashby Porter (The John Hopkins University Press: $26; 144 pp.) . Joe Ashby Porter has an unquestionable ability to turn a phrase and to create a setting, both of which he does in fine style in this collection of 11 short stories. His earlier collection, “The Kentucky Stories,” was a Pulitzer Prize nominee. The stories in “Lithuania” (the meaning of the title seems to be lifted from one of the “Jeopardy” game show’s categories) range, geographically, all over the landscape--from Tunis to Nashville, from Baltimore to Quebec--and the smells, sounds and backgrounds are right on target. However, Porter dangles, dances around and skips over both plot and character development in a most maddening way. In the story “Retrieval,” the protagonist and a friend go fishing in a lake on the Tennessee-Kentucky border. The friend rambles on, touching on the computer business, country music singers and geography, and concludes: “Country changes, but no invasion’ll ever vanquish it. Country assimilates, know what I mean, Rob?” At which point Rob confesses to the reader: “I wasn’t sure I did so I asked what kind of fish we were likely to get.” The reader, I fear, is in the same boat with the baffled Rob all too often.
More to Read
Sign up for our Book Club newsletter
Get the latest news, events and more from the Los Angeles Times Book Club, and help us get L.A. reading and talking.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.