Clearly, Wiley has distilled the essence of the Tacoma's North End and tiny lower Browns Point, and it is a fragrant flower of familiarity for anyone living in the region, past and present.
Read this in one sitting if possible so the vast cast of colorful characters, followed across decades, stay fresh in your mind; there are many. Minor memorable characters too such as the guilt-ridden man suffering from Bean's facedown syndrome and the fisticuffed twins, Fred and Red Dye, more finely nuance the stories. The irreverent hilarity of Perry's accidental goat murder and the presence of the life-sized, professor's, body-double mannequin attending the come-to-Jesus Kant family dinner party made for laugh-out-loud amusement and round out the powerful character development found in all these stories.
Wiley brilliantly connects the stories in surprising and satisfyingly subtle motifs. Locale motifs cleverly pepper and further solidify the Tacoma settings of the stories such as famous and infamous houses, where one should eat a Frisko Freeze burger, and the frigid cold of Commencement Bay (e.g., Perry and the goat, Cindy's near baptism). Wine motifs entertain throughout as well: Sauvignon Blanc-Cabernet Sauvignon, post-coital wine-and-crackers-in-bed followed by a more dignified amarone, and a courage-bolstering fast glass before meeting a twelfth and final e-harmony date. Indeed, the strange bedfellows of marriage and romantic relationships are a glue that bind these stories together too, as Mrs. Wilcox so wisely noted, "There should be a lemon law for marriage." While, the strange motifs around causes of death ("She died of gettin' a pillow in her mouth") and funerals - even a pet goat's - contrast all too starkly with ghosts of the very real victims of Ted Bundy. Finally, the many car reference motifs were far beyond this reviewer's vehicle knowledge.
Tools of the storytellers' trade that enhance and reward the reader with memorable descriptions - a buttery vibrator, the mossy morel-carpeted forest, and "sexy as a trimmed out librarian" - create vivid imagery.
On several occasions readers are challenged to flip back to previous stories to connect a past with a current story in these collected works but readers never doubt the authenticity of time and especially place in this wonderful tribute to the colorful and dignified, often misunderstood, city of Tacoma.