The Porno Girl
and Other Stories
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
Brazen and sharp-witted, Merin Wexler's linked stories bind mothers, daughters, and wives wrestling with a fear of intimacy in sexual and family relationships.
These are women and teenagers caught in the pivotal conflicts of their lives, questioning and testing out their desirability, and their fitness as wives, mothers, and friends.
Merin Wexler touches a nerve, capturing longings and terrors that are both all-too-familiar and usually kept private. A new mother finds herself inexplicably drawn to the local porn shop, her baby strapped to her chest. A career mom decides to have a second child to keep her nanny. A teenaged babysitter sleeps with the dad to get closer to the mom. The glamorous proprietress of the summerhouse next door takes advantage of her infatuated teenage neighbor to suppress her feelings of estrangement from her indifferent husband. Wickedly funny and unsettling, The Porno Girl is a work of startling insight by a gifted young writer.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Women strive to understand their roles as mothers, daughters, sisters and wives in the 11 stories in this crisp debut collection. Though Wexler treads familiar territory, she manages to stake out small plots of new ground with her quirky storytelling and unexpected insights. The protagonist of the title story makes regular visits to a porn shop with her newborn infant strapped to her chest, because the excursions titillate with the promise of making her feel alive again, her "body limber and warm." In "The Nanny Trap," a woman conceives a second child for the sole purpose of making her nanny stay with the family with disturbing consequences. Frances, the suddenly single mother of a young son in "Don Giovanni in the Tub," feels "terribly stunted, inadequate to the tasks of being his mother," an anxiety echoed by many of the characters in the collection. Several stories negotiate the perilous terrain of illicit love and lust, including one of the strongest, "Waiting to Discover Electricity," in which a college-aged babysitter has an affair with her charges' father in order to connect with his wife. Her inexperienced fumbling toward adulthood rings true, from her romantic view of her "snake charmer" lover to her adulation of his hip wife. A few entries are too blunt and heavy-handed, but Wexler's talent for startling observations one mother, reflecting on her relationship to her son, declares herself "stunned that she had carried inside her the body of a man miniature but anatomically complete, including a penis" more than redeems the collection. Sharp, wry and darkly funny, these stories show off a seductive, talented new voice.