
Before she commits to a relationship with this man, also widowed, she wants to double-check his work. The woman is attracted to an accountant who has been doing the couple’s taxes for years. They react emotionally, but understandably, to separation from what they know or have chosen, whether it be a longtime yardman or a pet rabbit suddenly gone blind.Īpart from the title story, “Ad Valorem” and “The Vermin Episode” stand out for creating discomforting sympathy with each protagonist-a woman recently widowed and a rabbi, respectively. Mothers and marriages are fretful where they are protagonists, women are older, childless, or with grown children who are distant. The youth is at the age when he or she can actively imagine that some just-met person “will become my husband (or wife).”įathers loom large in many of these early stories, whether in crisis or impacting the youth’s own life. This relationship impinges on the youth’s own sexual awakening. The twist in this story, and in several other stories, is that a youth, sometimes narrating years later, realizes that one of his or her parents has had a relationship with another person, and it still matters, even if the formerly beloved is obviously using the parent. She says nothing, of course, while her father builds on this impression in making his pitch. The pretense that she has just come from a Girl Scout meeting with her father helps establish his credentials as a caring parent. She lugs the sample case of different kinds of stone to each house. The title story is narrated by a teenager who dresses in a Girl Scout uniform (too small), pretending to be eleven, to help her father sell gravestones.

The book has won the Hudson Prize, awarded by the Black Lawrence Press.


Appel rewards readers with a collection of seven new short stories. ISBN 9781937854959Īfter publishing several novels, a volume of essays, and over two hundred short stories in literary journals and anthologies-winning a number of prizes along the way-Jacob M.
