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Maria, Maria

& Other Stories

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

LONGLISTED FOR THE 2022 NATIONAL BOOK AWARD FOR FICTION

Conjuring entrancing tales of Mexican American mystics and misfits, Marytza K. Rubio shatters the boundaries of reality with this fiercely imaginative debut.

"The first witch of the waters was born in Destruction. The moon named her Maria."

Set against the tropics and megacities of the Americas, Maria, Maria takes inspiration from wild creatures, tarot, and the porous borders between life and death. Motivated by love and its inverse, grief, the characters who inhabit these stories negotiate boldly with nature to cast their desired ends. As the enigmatic community college professor in "Brujería for Beginners" reminds us: "There's always a price for conjuring in darkness. You won't always know what it is until payment is due." This commitment drives the disturbingly faithful widow in "Tijuca," who promises to bury her husband's head in the rich dirt of the jungle, and the sisters in "Moksha," who are tempted by a sleek obsidian dagger once held by a vampiric idol.

But magic isn't limited to the women who wield it. As Rubio so brilliantly elucidates, animals are powerful magicians too. Subversive pigeons and hungry jaguars are called upon in "Tunnels," and a lonely little girl runs free with a resurrected saber-toothed tiger in "Burial." A colorful catalog of gallery exhibits from animals in therapy is featured in "Art Show," including the Almost Philandering Fox, who longs after the red pelt of another, and the recently rehabilitated Paranoid Peacocks.

Brimming with sharp wit and ferocious female intuition, these stories bubble over into the titular novella, "Maria, Maria"—a tropigoth family drama set in a reimagined California rainforest that explores the legacies of three Marias, and possibly all Marias. Writing in prose so lush it threatens to creep off the page, Rubio emerges as an ineffable new voice in contemporary short fiction.

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    • Library Journal

      November 1, 2021

      After debuting with the multi-award-finalist Godshot, Bieker returns with stories of Heartbroke characters whose loves and losses unfold in California's sunstruck Central Valley. Former Wallace Stegner Fellow Folk debuts with a collection of absurdist stories, including Out There, a piece published in The New Yorker about a woman whose attempts to use a dating app are disrupted by incredibly handsome yet artificial men deployed by Russian hackers. Acquired in a two-book deal that includes his debut novel, NYU Starworks fellow Friedlander's The Man Who Sold Air in the Holy Land is set in Israel and the Middle East and features outsiders who must contend with past sorrow or future uncertainty. A second collection after Light Lifting, which was short-listed for Giller, Commonwealth, and Frank O'Connor honors, MacLeod's Animal Person explores those moments when one's life is about to change (25,000-copy first printing). From poet Mirosevich, also author of the award-winning nonfiction Pink Harvest, Spell Heaven offers linked stories about a lesbian couple finding happiness in a coastal town. From Newman, whose memoir Still Points North was a finalist for the National Book Critic Circle's John Leonard Prize, Nobody Gets Out Alive highlights women struggling to get by in rugged Alaska (50,000-copy first printing). Witchcraft, blue jaguars, and a California rainforest-set novella starring Maria, Maria and possibly more Marias all feature in this mystical debut from former PEN America Emerging Voices Fellow Rubio.

      Copyright 2021 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 10, 2022
      Mysticism and imagination run wild in Rubio’s debut collection, which showcases glittering prose and a fearless approach to form and imagery. Many of these 10 tales defy categorization and blur genre boundaries. A duo searches the multiverse to find meaning in senseless death in “Carlos Across Space and Time.” “Brujería for Beginners” sees a magical teacher attempting to steer an unruly class. Generations of Marias work to make sense of their legacies and supernatural abilities within a dystopic jungle in “Maria, Maria.” Strongest are “Tijuca,” which captures the essence of grief as a widow cares for her husband’s remains, and “Burial,” which gives loneliness teeth as a young girl resurrects a saber-toothed tiger. Some of the more experimental works falter, however; both “Paint by Numbers” and “Art Show” privilege style over substance or clarity. Still, Rubio’s talent is evident, and there’s such a range of tones and genres on offer that any reader will find at least something to enjoy. Agent: Monica Odom, Odom Media Management.

    • Kirkus

      March 1, 2022
      Magical realism and myth meet dystopic themes in this debut collection of short fiction set in the Americas. Set against a backdrop of political inequities, climate catastrophes, and other crises, Rubio's stories offer alternative ways of squaring injustices (or getting revenge), beginning with "Brujer�a for Beginners," a second-person, instructional story about learning "spiritual vigilantism or expedited karma." "Calling it black magic," the teacher insists, "is devoid of context," especially when the context in question is domestic abuse. Similarly, in "Tunnels," the Fogata family, fed up with the racism and violence in 1990s California, hatches up a plot to release pigeons emitting powerful electromagnetic pulses that bring the entire Southwest to a grinding halt. A magic mirror that transports the viewer to other versions of life allows the narrator of "Carlos Across Time and Space," one of the collection's standouts, to picture a different death for Carlos, who was senselessly murdered at a high school graduation party. Magical possibilities compete with reason and often win, especially for characters who are ill-served by what society serves up for them. In "Burial," another fine story, a girl who is an outcast at school because she once tried to save a hummingbird is saved twice by tigers. Rubio is an extravagant storyteller; her prose thrums with life, and her plots take hairpin turns. All of this is on full display in "Maria, Maria," a sweeping story that leaps backward and forward in time and from perspective to perspective as it traces the fates of three women all the way back to a mythic world. Except for a few of the more formally experimental stories ("Art Show" and "Paint by Numbers") that fall flat, this is transporting work. Sprawling magical realistic stories with a moral bent.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from March 15, 2022
      Rubio's stunning debut short story collection is grounded in atavism while catapulting readers into a near future soaked in twenty-first-century magic realism. A community college brujer�a class, an opening salvo on "the country once known as the United States," and tales featuring trained pigeons and jaguars and a pueblo re-emerging after the big one (the Orion earthquake) are just a few of Rubio's bewitching scenarios. While most of the stories are set in Southern California, a few reach farther afield to Brazil and New Orleans while featuring primarily female protagonists--mothers, sisters, friends, aunts, and cousins--ferociously celebrating feminine power. Rubio confects her moving, disturbing, and intense stories in a variety of styles, voices, and tones, from dark parody to heart-wrenching, grotesque, and violent yet touching. Adorned with illustrations of powerful simplicity, her stories feature shape-shifters, anthropomorphic animals, over-the-top celebrities (reminiscent of singer Paquita la del Barrio), witches, and mediums rooted in Mexican tropes, images, and language. One of Rubio's characters declares, "It's not time travel, pendeja." Libraries beware: mischievous Rubio exhorts readers to add their own drawings to blank pages to fully engage and feel the joy of creation.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      March 1, 2022

      DEBUT "There's always a price for conjuring in darkness," explains the instructor in "Brujer�a for Beginners," which opens this iridescent first collection from former PEN America Emerging Voices Fellow Rubio. "You won't always know what it is until payment is due." Purveying characters (both women and animals) with otherworldly powers, Rubio steps across the thin border between life and a dangerous beyond to consider what such payments might entail. For instance, a woman following strict ritual when agreeing to bury her deceased husband's head in his native Brazil plans to break her promise to remain with him and instead return to California. But does she? In the ambitious title novella, 12-year-old Maite (Maria Teresa) loses her celebrity psychic mother LaZuli (Maria Lucia) in a climate-devastated near-future and eventually meets her mother's estranged twin (Maria Caracol), whose Book of Marias traces their heritage back to a time when the Moon intervened to protect animals from the Sun. Involving a near-sacrifice and ending in a battle between a blue jaguar and the golden crocodile, the narrative sometimes overreaches but remains a lush tour de force. VERDICT A vividly accomplished debut.

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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