LIFE AND OTHER SHORTCOMINGS: DINNER CONVERSATIONS

December 8, 2020 | By | Reply More

LIFE AND OTHER SHORTCOMINGS: EXCERPT

Life and Other Shortcomings is a collection of linked short stories that takes the reader from New Orleans to New York City to Madrid, and from 1970 to the present day. The women in these twelve stories make a number of different choices: some work, others don’t; some stay married, some get divorced; others never marry at all.

Through each character’s intimate journey, specific truths are revealed about what it means to be a woman―in relationship with another person, in a particular culture and era―and how these conditions ultimately affect her relationship with herself.

The stories as a whole depict patriarchy, showing what still might be, but certainly what was, for some women in this country before the #MeToo movement. Both a cautionary tale and a captivating window into women’s lives, Life and Other Shortcomings is required reading for anyone interested in an honest, incisive, and compelling portrayal of the female experience.

“A compelling collection that captures the mystery and menace beneath love and family life.”
Kirkus Reviews

“Corie Adjmi has a flair for dramatizing scenes. She homes in on the killer moment, and her dialogue is so honest that I was cringing at times . . . It is just so vivid.”
―Susan Breen, author of The Fiction Class

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We are delighted to feature this excerpt!

Dinner Conversation 

We sit three couples as we always do, boy girl, boy girl, with no married couples next to each other. When we were first married, I didn’t like this. Now I don’t care.

It is 1998, and this New York City restaurant just recently opened. It’s a happening kind of place populated by the cool and the young—part bar, part restaurant, part lounge. Red walls make you feel both sexy and regal. Music beats in the background. It’s the kind that seeps into your skin and pulses under your bones.
We sit at a large round table and a waitress, her hair tied back in a ponytail, approaches us. She isn’t wearing any makeup, and she exudes a wholesome sexuality that, I have to admit, is alluring. She hands each of us a menu and lights a candle in the center of the table. She moves like an exotic bird, graceful and deliberate. I have just laid eyes on this woman, and already I am threatened by her natural beauty and her presence. She stands beside me, both feet grounded. 

I play a game. I spot a person, and based on how they look, what they wear, and how they stand, I draw up a whole life for them: if they’re married or not, where they live, what their apartment or house looks like, and what they do for a living. I decide that she’s an aspiring actress, living in an apartment in the Village, venturing toward her dream. 

Marisa, a Monica Lewinsky look-alike, sits to the right of my husband, Dylan. They went to high school together, and, when she married Eric, Dylan marched in their wedding. When Dylan and I started dating, he wanted me to get to know them. He didn’t care what his mother thought about me; he wanted Marisa to like me. And she did. 

Dana, who is tall and blonde, sits to Dylan’s left. She just got back from a spa in California and she’s lost weight. She looks too skinny to me—the bones in her wrist protrude like large marbles. But who am I to judge? Dylan says you can never be too skinny; it’s like being too rich. 

I watch my husband as he entertains. I pay special attention as he leans in to say something to Dana. She throws her head back and laughs. 

Dylan and I have been friends with Dana and Peter for close to fifteen years. We met them at a parenting class we took before the birth of our first child. Dylan was complaining about having to be there on a Monday night during football season, and Peter overheard him. They took off early and went to a bar across the street to watch the end of the game. 

We’ve all been friends ever since. We know this is unusual. About ten years ago, five years into the friendship, five years’ worth of dinners and vacations and cocktail parties, we named ourselves: we are “The Sixers.” 

When the waitress returns, she places a basket of bread on our table. Marisa, who is facing the wall, turns her body dramatically, her long black hair swinging over her shoulder. It isn’t often that Marisa doesn’t sit facing out, able to see the crowd, and she wants everyone at our table to notice her strain. 

“What can I get you?” the waitress asks. 

I know what Dylan is thinking. He gets that look on his face, the one I recognize all too well. The one he, at one time, reserved for me. His eyes glimmer like two perfect diamonds. “What’s your name?” he asks the waitress. 

“Judy,” she says, smiling, her teeth lined up like a row of miniature marshmallows. 

“Hi, Judy,” Dylan flirts. “Nice to meet you. We’ll have two bottles of Pellegrino for the table, and I’ll have a Glenrothes, neat.” 

Judy takes our drink order, and Dylan looks at me. “You’re going to eat that?” 

I slip the breadstick out of my mouth and scan the table to see who has heard this. I’ve gained weight, and it bothers Dylan that his wife is getting fat. I’m not sure how I feel about it. At first it was a surprise, but now I kind of like the extra weight. It makes me feel stronger, more grounded. But Dylan has no patience for fat. Fat, in his view, is a complete betrayal of a body, and it represents a person without discipline or self-respect. Pregnancy is no exception. And while I felt full and complete, voluptuous, and even beautiful as I carried my three children to term, I knew that Dylan couldn’t look at me.

 

Excerpted from LIFE AND OTHER SHORTCOMINGS

—Corie Adjmi is the author of Life and Other Shortcomings. Her award-winning fiction and personal essays have appeared in over two dozen publications, including North American Review, Indiana Review, South Dakota ReviewHuffPost, Evansville Review, Green Hills Literary Lantern, RiverSedge, Licking River Review and others. Life and Other Shortcomings won a 2020 American Fiction Prize and was a “Best Books” winning-finalist. Life and other Shortcomings was also a winning-finalist for the BkMk Press Fiction Award.

Follow her on Twitter https://twitter.com/CorieAdjmi

To visit my website go to www.corieadjmi.com

Visit her website: www.corieadjmi.com

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Category: Contemporary Women Writers, On Writing

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