Welcome to my stop on the Virtual
Book Tour, presented by Pump Up Your
Book, for Loss Angeles by Mathieu Cailler. Please
leave a comment or question for Mathieu to let him know you stopped by. You can follow all of the stops on Mathieu’s
tour by clicking on the banner above.
Loss Angeles
by Mathieu Cailler
by Mathieu Cailler
Publisher: Short Story America Press
Release Date: March 15, 2015
Genre: Short Stories
Length: 217 Pages
Format: Hardcover
Length: 217 Pages
Format: Hardcover
About the book:
Set in the glamorous city of Los Angeles, California, LOSS ANGELES
skips the shine and celebrity the city is known for and instead dives deeply
into the lives of ordinary Angelenos. In each of the fifteen stories in this
collection, author Mathieu Cailler examines the private lives of a diverse mix
of characters. This collection of stories showcases the rawness of real life,
the complexity of navigating personal challenges and internal conflicts, and
the ever present possibility of encountering unexpected compassion and empathy.
The stories in LOSS ANGELES uncover the reality that the interiors of
people’s lives often have huge holes in them. In the collection, a quiet
divorced man, who is still deeply in love with his ex-wife, finally speaks up
when his son’s soon-to-be stepfather becomes enraged over a broken birthday
gift. A young man visiting his parents for the first time in nine years delays
his presence at his family’s Thanksgiving dinner to see an old friend who was
influential in his early life. Cailler also goes beyond loss and grief to
reveal hidden human kindness in the stories of a widower, who steps out of his
melancholy to save the life of a stranger, and an aging bachelor, who becomes a
father figure for a wayward young woman.\
In “Over the Bridge,” Ella is a teenager learning to manage her grief
over the death of her mother and the new life she and her seven-year-old
brother have with their father, with whom the children have not lived with
since their parents’ divorce. While Ella is receiving weekly counseling at
school, she continues to struggle with the changes in her life. When the
counselor instructs Ella to write a letter to her father explaining the
uncertainty and distance she feels in regard to her relationship with him, Ella
complies and writes with the type of honesty that one allows when there is no
plan to share what is written. But when Ella finds herself in a frightening
situation with a boy at a party after consuming drugs and alcohol, the letter
becomes the catalyst for a change in perspective for her father.
“Hit and Stay” is the story of a young married man making the long
drive home from an out-of-town business trip. Penn is troubled as he drives his
SUV through back roads to avoid the highway traffic. The quiet drive in the warm
cocoon of the truck affords Penn the opportunity to reflect on the one-night
stand he had with a new employee. As he contemplates how or if he will confess
his mistake to his wife, Kimberly, Penn reviews his life with the woman he was
once passionately in love with who has grown distant since the death of her
mother. During the drive, Penn has an unfortunate accident that breaks the
delicate hold he has on his volatile emotional state.
The conflict between familial violence and love is the foundation of
“Dark Timber.” Clevie and his older brother, Roy, reluctantly accompany their
father on a hunting expedition. Their father, an alcoholic recently released
from prison after serving time for beating the boys’ mother, is determined to
teach his sons how to hunt for their own food.
The relationship between father and sons is strained. Roy has personal
experience with his father’s violent temper, but young Clevie remains hopeful
that life with their father will improve. Neither boy is interested in hunting.
Clevie is the most reluctant to fire on innocent animals. However, when their
father comes face-to-face with a menacing predator, both boys instinctively
respond to his pleas for help.
“LOSS ANGELES is a throwback to eclectic short story collections of past
years and is only bound by the theme of loss in a very general sense,” Cailler
says. “The stories are by turns fragile, tender, and always memorable. The
characters in this book are as diverse as the city itself… they all have a
story to share, and it was my job to do just that. I don’t believe in being
predestined while writing; therefore, some of the stories end with a bit of
hope while others reach their coda in a disconcerting fashion.”
Exposing emotions was Cailler’s focus when writing the collection. “I
want the reader to relate to the feelings and sentiments expressed in the book.
I think loss is the greatest bond we possess as humans, and there isn’t a
single person around who hasn’t experienced it. We’ve all lost something dear
to us, something profound,” the author says. “I think if a reader comes away
from LOSS ANGELES feeling more connected to others and/or him or herself, I’ll
have done my job. Whenever I write, I think of Plato’s words: ‘Be kind, for
everyone you meet is fighting a harder battle.’ That’s something that I hope
will resonate with the reader.”
For More Information
- Loss Angeles is available at Amazon.
- Pick up your copy at Barnes & Noble.
- Discuss this book at PUYB Virtual Book Club at Goodreads.
Penn continued to drive through the night. Snow and gales of wind assailed his SUV as he barreled towards home, his foot steady on the gas, his hands positioned firmly at ten and two. Heat billowed from the vents on the dashboard and moved loose strands of hair on his face. He didn’t want to replay the scenario—the quiet L.A. hotel room, the closed drapes, the underwear on the floor, the moaning, the taste of her lips—but the SUV’s quiet cabin was a hotbed for reflection.His headlights brushed a green highway sign, indicating that there were eighty-nine miles left on his journey home to Lake Tahoe. With the winter weather, it might take Penn more than two hours, but that was all right. How would he look at Kimberly after what he’d done?“Don’t marry young,” people had told him a few years ago when he’d passed around the idea of proposing. “You haven’t tested the waters.” Cliché after cliché came at him, and while the marriage advice was stale and up there with “enjoy each day like it’s your last” and “don’t let anyone tell you something’s impossible,” it wasn’t amiss.Becky had been with the company for a couple months now; there’d been some mild flirting, but Penn just thought that was the way she was, and he flirted back from time to time, knowing that it was just a game. Becky saw the wedding band on his finger; she could put two and two together.But on this recent trip, Penn and Becky had found themselves at the hotel bar, overlooking the glimmering L.A skyline. There was a meeting early in the morning, and most of the company’s employees had gone to bed. She approached Penn and slid onto the chair next to his. They drank, and their eyes held one another in the empty bar. The piano man played his versions of “So What” and “Stardust,” songs that made people more attractive and made conversations more interesting. The right strap of Becky’s blue dress kept slipping off her freckled shoulder, and she left her smooth skin exposed longer than normal before bringing the strap back up. Her breasts were pressed up and together, and when she crossed her legs, one of her black heels dangled a few inches from her foot, making it seem as though she was already undressing. Penn remembered the way she reached over and touched his right hand.The worst part was that Penn had only slept with Becky because of the confidence Kimberly had given him. Many times she’d reaffirmed his self-esteem, telling him he was worthy of love, that he was better-looking than he imagined, and that he deserved the best.Penn believed the burden would be lightened if he told Kimberly, but at the same time, he thought the words might destroy her, and that’s not what he wanted. It’d taken cheating for him to know how much he loved her, but who would believe a line like that?The tapping of a snare drum leaked out from the speakers, accompanied by the beat of an upright bass and the trill of a clarinet. He lowered the window and let the cold air flow into the sweltering cabin.Was there a perfect scenario? Penn thought. He let his mind wander. When he got home maybe Kimberly would be crying.What’s wrong? Penn would say.I did something terrible, Kimberly would answer.Kimberly would go on to tell Penn that she’d slept with someone else, that she was sorry, and that it didn’t mean anything. After that, he’d say the same thing. Two wrongs, one right. But even thinking about her sleeping with someone else made him sick. That wasn’t at all what he wanted.High school sweethearts turned lovers turned husband and wife turned roommates—that’s what they were. Penn found it more and more difficult to make her laugh. Where there’d been kisses, there were now smiles. Where there’d been heat, there was now platitude. Where there’d been love, there was now familiarity.
About the Author
No comments:
Post a Comment