Oh, man. I loved CHASE US! This is a legitimately great and new book of stories, and I don’t mean new in that it’s hot off the presses. I mean that it uses characters and time and identity in ways that I’ve not come across in any collection since Jesus’ Son. This is not to say it’s experimental or too heady or any of that bo-hunk. The individual stories are traditional in their arcs and still, thankfully, aim at the heart over the head.
The cast of characters, however, employ this strange dance where all of the stories involve basically the same group of guys (kids from Philly, starting as preteens and tracking them to dangerous teens all the way to nervous parenthood), anchored by one steady and unnamed narrator. Yet, although the characters’ names remain the same throughout, the characters themselves seem to shape shift. Their back-stories and motivations are not always in line from one story to the next (parents are dead in one story and then alive again a few stories later, for example) and you end up getting the sense that the boys operate more as if part of a wolf-pack than a traditional group of friends. It’s less about individual boys and more about alpha and beta males and the narrator among them; the kid with the big anxious heart.
And these stories, as much as they are an ode to the author’s hometown of Philadelphia, are also an ode to Anxiety. From the funny brand of anxiety that teens can have (What’s a blow job? Does she actually blow on it?) to the scary brand (hassled by neighborhood gangs and drug dealers, being kidnapped or kidnapping someone) to the most earnest brand (staring down at your baby in the crib), these stories are all fueled by anxiety. This propels us from page to page at a quick and intensely satisfying pace (even the longer stories, it seemed to me, flew by) and prepares us for the last two stories of the collection (“The Dependents” and “This is Tomorrow”) which, for all their humor, left me with a damn lump in my throat.
So, the good news: For those of us out there who love story collections, who still believe this is where we find some of the best writing in America, period, then Sean Ennis’s CHASE US is our newest irrefutable evidence. Read this book and say yeah!