Friday, January 16, 2026

Book Review: AN ANTHOLOGY OF RURAL STORIES BY WRITERS OF COLOR, 2025



Title: An Anthology of Rural Stories by Writers of Color, 2025

Editor: Deesha Philyaw

Publisher: Eastover Press

Pages: 280

My GoodReads Rating: ⭐⭐⭐1/2 


This is the 3rd edition of this collection of short stories. The guest editor, Deesha Phillyaw, has selected 16 out of a shortlist of 40 submissions. Most of the stories have been previously published in literary journals.

I appreciated the peek into the lives of other people and got a taste of how vast and expansive life in rural areas is, and how we, from our limited urban perspective, end up seeing rural life in ways that are reductive.

The Kitchen and Beantown show the sullying of childhood innocence by introducing them too early and very harshly to the reality of the world around them, and the wicked things that adults indulge in. Wild Hogs on the Backside of Yonder and There’s the Indian! are powerful attempts on the part of ordinary people to fight against negative influences.

 

1)     Uncle Tito – Noah Alvarez: Uncle Tito, sober for eight months after 26 years of hard drinking, has lost everything he owned and is now crashed out in the home of his sister, her boyfriend, and her young son, the unnamed basketball playing school kid who is the narrator of the story. On the day of a big playoff game, Uncle Tito bequeaths his Jesus piece necklace to his nephew for good luck. Something very good and something very bad happens on this day.

2)     The Kitchen – Victoria Ballesteros: The unnamed narrator, the youngest of nine siblings, lets us into her mother’s kitchen, which bursts with generosity despite the family’s poverty. Her father gets her a rabbit, who she loves with all her heart, until one day when it disappears.

This story is a coming-of-age experience for the child who learns so many things, a reminder of the helplessness of her mother who cares for the family but is not cared for in return, and the untrustworthiness and vile nature of her father and his three brothers. We get a glimpse of the life they live, with large families, hard work, especially on the part of the women, meagre comforts, if any, yet rooted in faith and belief.

3) The After-Brother, the Before-Brother, and the Now-Brother: The Very Small Telling of the Time-Triplets of Honey – Exodus Oktavia Brownlow: The story is set in Missouri in 1938 and is written in the first-person present tense PoV of the three named in the title.

This was the shortest story in this anthology, and referenced post-partum stress, and how the mother learns to be a mother.

4) Wild Hogs on the Backside of Yonder – CG Crawford: In a very small town in Alabama, old farmers are being forced out of their farms and lands by the predatory McGrangers. They are forced to sell acres and acres of land for a dollar an acre. Old man River lives alone. He has lost his beloved wife and daughter. Two of his kids have moved out and don’t call him. The McGrangers poison River’s dogs and leave the bodies of dead hogs in his field to harass him into leaving.

Previously published, this story ended too early. I would have liked to read about what happens next, even though the conclusion seems foregone.

5) Dollhouses – Monic Ductan: An elderly woman, who collects dollhouses, helps a little boy who had just been jumped by an older kid. She takes him home and gives him a sandwich, and he plays with a dollhouse that she has in her kitchen.

This story had potential, but it ended too soon.

6) Middling – LaTanya McQueen: Candace and Martin, married, no kids, are plodding along in their marriage, when Martin becomes increasingly enamoured and obsessed with the Civil War, particularly the Confederate side. He begins to spend their savings on books relating to the period, and weapons and even a Confederate uniform, choosing to live more and more in the pretend-world than in reality.

7) Beantown – Jennifer Morales: A 5yo girl, Elina, receives her very first lesson in prejudice, both the subtle and the blatant kind, through a very icky experience.

This story is written from the first-person PoV of a 5yo kindergarten student. It captures the child’s voice very effectively, through the bad grammar and misspelling, and the childish observations.

8) There’s the Indian! – Ruby Murray: Patrick Xhuda, proud Indian from the Xhuda tribe, is upset that his beloved Red Hawk town, built on Reservation land, is slowly being taken over by a white woman, Bonnie Campbell, whose grandparents cheated Patrick’s grandparents and stole their money. When she opens a hugely popular restaurant in town, he decides to eat at her restaurant, dressed in his traditional costume and head gear, just to make a statement. He cannot prevent her progress, but he can stand up and show up for his tribe.

9) En Plena Vista – Michael Pacheco: Special Agent Pete Varela is sent to a rural farm from where the DEA has tracked two homing devices. There Varela finds an old farmer couple, the O’Briens, who have been paid $1000 just to have two trailer trucks parked on their land. On opening the trucks, Varela finds a dead cow in each of them. Satisfied that there is nothing amiss or illegal, Varela closes the case, but then the trucks disappear.

This is a tale that the reader may find amusing, but not if they are related to law enforcement.

10) Beer & Butter Sauce – Tisha Marie Reichle-Aguilera: The unnamed teenage narrator, abandoned by her mother and having no idea who her father is, waits for her mother to show up while her grandparents who have raised her prepare a barbecue for her.

11) Houses Acting Like Cars – Sarp Sozdinler: A young 16yo girl, Blue, whose mother has died without revealing the identity of her father, gets a letter from Social Services, and sets out in search of her father.

I couldn’t quite figure out this one.

12) Ithaca Is Never Far – Sejal Shah: The unnamed narrator, an America-born child of Indian immigrants, is trying hard to find somebody like her to date. She finds a guy she likes but he is unwilling to consider the possibility of a relationship because Ithaca, where she lives, is very far.

The story captures well the condition of being suspended between two cultures, the dual nature of yearning for something, while wanting to be a part of something else. The story was beautiful, but the rural aspect was not quite evident. Perhaps Ithaca is a rural area; I am unfamiliar with American geography.

13) How to Survive a Black Hole – Dawn Tasaka Steffler: Twenty-two years ago, the unnamed narrator’s older brother killed himself. Now she is back in her childhood home to pack up the family’s belongings, and move her mother to a care facility closer to her own home, and lock up the house.

The black hole in this beautiful story is both literal and figurative.

14) The House Always Wins – Sara Streeter: Tess comes to Toano to meet Garrett, her white boyfriend of one year. Garrett has moved to the house of his childhood friend Bobby, whose parents, like Garrett’s own, have Confederate sympathies. The implied racism makes Tess, who is Asian, uncomfortable. At Bobby’s house, Tess feels increasingly uncomfortable with Bobby’s behaviour and his habits. He has a drinking problem, and no concept of boundaries.

This one was very good.

15) Field Methods – Lisa Wartenberg Velez: A young college student, Miriam, misses her dead father and resents the mother who is trying hard to take care of them both. She gets an internship at the forensic department to observe the effect of nature, natural predators and pathogens on dead bodies.

The writing was rich and earthy.

16) Princeton – Robert Yune: My access to this collection expired before I could start reading this story.


(I read this book on NetGalley. Thank you to the author, the publisher and NetGalley.)

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