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Michael Williams, in Melbourne’s The Age,
wrote of this award-winning, dazzling debut collection, “By turns
horrific and beautiful . . . Humanity at its most fractured and
desolate . . . Often moving, frequently surprising, even blackly funny
. . . Things We Didn’t See Coming is terrific.” This is just
one of the many rave reviews that appeared on the Australian
publication of these nine connected stories set in a not-too-distant
dystopian future in a landscape at once utterly fantastic and
disturbingly familiar.
Richly imagined, dark, and darkly comic,
the stories follow the narrator over three decades as he tries to
survive in a world that is becoming increasingly savage as cataclysmic
events unfold one after another. In the first story, “What We Know
Now”—set in the eve of the millennium, when the world as we know it is
still recognizable—we meet the then-nine-year-old narrator fleeing the
city with his parents, just ahead of a Y2K breakdown. The remaining
stories capture the strange—sometimes heartbreaking, sometimes
funny—circumstances he encounters in the no-longer-simple act of
survival; trying to protect squatters against floods in a place where
the rain never stops, being harassed (and possibly infected) by a man
sick with a virulent flu, enduring a job interview with an unstable
assessor who has access to all his thoughts, taking the gravely ill on
adventure tours. But we see in each story that, despite the violence
and brutality of his days, the narrator retains a hold on his essential
humanity—and humor.
Things We Didn’t See Coming is haunting, restrained, and beautifully crafted—a stunning debut.
About the Author
Steven Amsterdam,
is a native New Yorker who moved to Melbourne, Australia, in 2003. He
currently works as a psychiatric nurse. You can visit him on the web
at www.stevenamsterdam.com
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